Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
On the basis of Bohr's theory, derive an expression for the radius of the nth orbit of an electron of the hydrogen atom.
उत्तर
Let m and e be the mass and the charge of the electron. If the electron revolves with velocity v in the circular orbit
of radius r, then according to first Bohr’s postulate.
Centripetal force = Electrostatic force
`(mv)^2/r = e^2/(4piepsilon_0r^2)`
`:. v^2 = e^2/(4piepsilon_0mr)` .....(1)
According to second postulate
`mvr = (nh)/(2pi)` , where n = 1, 2, 3, .... and h is planck’s constant
Squaring this expression we get,
`m^2v^2r^2 = (n^2h^2)/(4pi^2) `
`:. v^2 = (n^2h^2)/(4pim^2r^2)` ....(2)
Equating the values of v2 from eq. 1 & 2
`e^2/(4piepsilon_0mr) = (n^2h^2)/(4pi^2m^2r^2)`
`:. r= ((epsilon_0h^2)/(pime^2))n^2`
This expression gives us the radius of the Bohr’s orbit. The radius of the successive orbits is given by substituting.
n = 1, 2, 3, ... etc. since `epsilon_0` , h, m, e are all constant, ∴ r α n2
Thus radius of orbit is proportional to the square of the principle quantum number.
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
State Bohr’s postulate of hydrogen atom which successfully explains the emission lines in the spectrum of hydrogen atom. Use Rydberg formula to determine the wavelength of Hα line. [Given: Rydberg constant R = 1.03 × 107 m−1]
The radius of the innermost electron orbit of a hydrogen atom is 5.3 × 10−11 m. What are the radii of the n = 2 and n = 3 orbits?
Radiation coming from transition n = 2 to n = 1 of hydrogen atoms falls on helium ions in n = 1 and n = 2 states. What are the possible transitions of helium ions as they absorbs energy from the radiation?
Suppose in an imaginary world the angular momentum is quantized to be even integral multiples of h/2π. What is the longest possible wavelength emitted by hydrogen atoms in visible range in such a world according to Bohr's model?
According to Bhor' s theory the moment of momentum of an electron revolving in second orbit of hydrogen atom will be.
The binding energy of a H-atom, considering an electron moving around a fixed nuclei (proton), is B = `- (Me^4)/(8n^2ε_0^2h^2)`. (m = electron mass). If one decides to work in a frame of reference where the electron is at rest, the proton would be moving around it. By similar arguments, the binding energy would be
B = `- (Me^4)/(8n^2ε_0^2h^2)` (M = proton mass)
This last expression is not correct because ______.
The simple Bohr model cannot be directly applied to calculate the energy levels of an atom with many electrons. This is because ______.
Taking the Bohr radius as a0 = 53 pm, the radius of Li++ ion in its ground state, on the basis of Bohr’s model, will be about ______.
The electron in a hydrogen atom first jumps from the third excited state to the second excited state and subsequently to the first excited state. The ratio of the respective wavelengths, λ1/λ2, of the photons emitted in this process is ______.
The energy of an electron in the nth orbit of the hydrogen atom is En = -13.6/n2eV. The negative sign of energy indicates that ______.