Mostly what I don't understand is the S, P, D and F levels of an atom and naming atoms like 1Ssub1 2Ssub2 1Psub2 etc, if you know what I'm talking about.
S P D and F are all electronic orbital levels in an atom, though for the most part people don't worry about the F ones, as they don't feature except in really heavy elements.
First of all, you have to know the number of electrons your atom has; this is it's atomic number, minus the charge. For instance a neutral Oxygen atom has an atomic number of 8, and so has 8 electrons.
To name atoms, first of all, you care about the energy level (n), or also known as the shell number, of the electron. This starts at 1, and goes up to infinity.
The number of electrons in a level is quite simple: 2 x n^2
So for n = 1, this is 2
For n = 2, this is 8 (2 squared, times 2)
n = 3, this is 18
and so on.
Next you allocate them into orbitals, based on the electrons in an energy level. There are 2 S electrons, 6 P electrons, and 10 D electrons.
Finally, in each orbital, there can only be 2 electrons in a particular sub orbital, and these are filled as equally as possible.
The suborbitals are:
s (no suborbitals), only one type
p - p(x), p(y), and p(z)
d - d(xy), d(yz), d(xz), d(z^2), d(x^2y^2)
For the most part though this doesn't matter.
You then fill these orbitals in the order S,P,D,F
So let's recap
You place electrons into shells, and the electrons in a shell are 2 n^2, where n is the shell number
You arrange electrons in a shell into orbitals, in the order S,P,D (and F,) which have 2, 6, 10 electrons in respectively, and at an advanced level split them into sub orbitals which have 2 electrons in each.
So, let's go with Oxygen, which as 8 electrons
The first shell n=1 only can have 2 electrons, and only in the s orbital, so the first electrons are 1s2 (shell number, orbital, number of electrons in orbital)
That's the first one filled up, so we move to the next one, n=2
As before we start with the s orbital, and since we have 6 electrons, we can fill this up, giving 2s2
That leaves 4 electrons, and the 2s orbital is full, but the n=2 shell isn't, so we put these last ones in the p orbital. As we only have 4 electrons, we can't fill it up completely
So for Oxygen, we get
1s2, 2s2, 2p4
Trying something larger, an atom of Calcium, which has 20 electrons.
1s2,
2s2, 2p6,
3s2, 3p6 <---- the reason why we don't have 3d2 here instead of 4s2 is because the next s orbital is easier to fill than the d orbital. This changes from atom to atom though
4s2
Hopefully this should give you and idea of what to do now.
(I'm currently studying for a Chemistry degree by the way )
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