If an electron has a spin quantum no. of "+1/2" and a magnetic quantum no. of -1, it cannot be present in?

(a) d-orbital
(b) f-orbital
(c) p-orbital
(d) s-orbital

1 Answer
Apr 7, 2018

(d) s orbital

Explanation:

The trick here is to realize that an s orbital cannot be described by a magnetic quantum number equal to -1.

The s subshell contains a single s orbital, which implies that the magnetic quantum number, which tells you the orientation of the orbital that holds a given electron, can only take 1 possible value.

More specifically, for an s subshell, you have

l = 0

The angular momentum quantum number, l, describes the energy subshell in which the electron resides.

For a given subshell, the relationship between the angular momentum quantum number and the magnetic quantum number is given by

m_l = {-l, -(l-1), ..., - 1, 0, 1, ..., (l-1), l}

This means that for the s subshell, you have

m_l = 0

as the only value that the magnetic quantum number can take.

Consequently, you can say that

m_l = -1

cannot describe an electron located in an s orbital because an s orbital can only be described by m_l = 0.