Question #8f16a
1 Answer
(1)
Chromium(III) has an oxidation number of
Therefore, we can say that chromium(III) oxide contains the
- The magnitude of the anion charge becomes the subscript of the cation.
- The magnitude of the cation charge becomes the subscript of the anion.
With
-> "Cr"_color(red)(2)"O"_color(blue)(3)
(2)
-
Option A gives us
(n,l,m_l) = (2,0,0) . This is possible, since it correlates with a2s orbital, for whichn = 2 andl = 0 . By definition, ifl = 0 ,m_l = {0} , which makes sense because there exists only one2s orbital. -
Option B is also possible, since
(n,l,m_l) = (2,1,-1) , and ifl = 1 ,m_l = {0, pm1} . This is simply one of the2p orbitals, since forl = 1 , we are looking at ap orbital. -
Option C is again possible. For
n = 3 instead of2 , we just now have a3p orbital. A2p orbital exists, therefore a3p orbital exists. -
Option D, where
(n,l,m_l) = (1,1,1) couldn't work, becausen = 1 . By definition,l = 0, 1, . . . , n - 1 . Sincen - 1 = 0 , this is self-contradictory. Whenl = 0 ,l cannot equal1 .
Hence, option D gives the uh... correctly incorrect configuration.
(3)
Recall the equation for the de Broglie wavelength (not to be confused with the Compton wavelength):
\mathbf(lambda_("dB") = h/p = h/(mv))
You were already given the mass
Hence, you can solve for
color(blue)(lambda) = (6.626xx10^(-34) "J"cdot"s")/("2.0 kg"xx"50 m/s")
= (6.626xx10^(-34) cancel("kg")cdot"m"^cancel(2)"/"cancel("s"^2)cdotcancel("s"))/("2.0" cancel("kg")xx50 cancel("m")"/"cancel("s"))
= (6.626xx10^(-34))/(100) "m"
= color(blue)(6.626xx10^(-36) "m")
You can figure out how to round this to find the answer in your choices.
(4)
Nitrogen is on row
1s^2 => "He" configuration
1s^2 2s^1 => "Li" configuration
1s^2 2s^2 => "Be" configuration
1s^2 2s^2 2p^1 => "B" configuration
1s^2 2s^2 2p^2 => "C" configuration
1s^2 2s^2 2p^3 => "N" configuration
So that would explain why all configurations given as answer choices have exactly
Now, recall:
- Aufbau principle: electrons fill orbitals in order from lowest to highest energy.
- Hund's rule: Electrons generally fill each orbital one electron at a time (in order to maximize the number of parallel electron spins).
- Pauli Exclusion Principle: Each orbital can only contain two electrons, and they must be different spins. One must be
+1/2 (spin-up) if the other is-1/2 (spin-down).
Hence, only option D is correct.
Option A is less stable because two electrons are paired in the
Option B is impossible, because the second electron spin is violating the Pauli Exclusion Principle in the
Option C is impossible for the same reason, except the