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Atoms

siiky

2023/07/28

2023/07/28

2023/07/28

science,chemistry

Shells and subshells

https://www.khanacademy.org/science/biology/chemistry--of-life/electron-shells-and-orbitals/a/the-periodic-table-electron-shells-and-orbitals-article

An atom's electrons don't fly around the nucleus in an orbit, like a satellite around a planet. Instead, electrons "exist", move, zip here and there, within a certain space around the nucleus. The space around the nucleus an electron spends most of its time in (e.g. 90% of the time) is called an "orbital" (NOT an "orbit").

Additionally, an atom's electrons don't all necessarily fit in the same orbital. Because of this, they're arranged in/distributed across shells (sort of like "levels"; see pic), called 1n, 2n, 3n, &c. Shells are generally filled with electrons from the lower to higher levels: first 1n, then 2n, then 3n, &c (there are exceptions, apparently?).

Atom shells ("levels")

In turn, each shell is composed of one or more subshells (see pic):

And subshells are composed of one or more orbitals (see pic):

Atom shells & subshells

Finally, each orbital may have at most 2 electrons, not more.

s orbitals have a spherical shape; and p orbitals have a dumbbell (or "hourglass") shape; (don't know about the other two).