Alternate Names: | protium |
Mass Number: | 1 |
Symbol: | H |
Halflife: | stable |
Num Neutrons: | 0 |
Num Protons: | 1 |
Abundance: | 99.985% |
Mass: | 1.007825 |
A hydrogen atom is an atom of the chemical element hydrogen. The electrically neutral atom contains a single positively charged proton and a single negatively charged electron bound to the nucleus by the Coulomb force. Atomic hydrogen constitutes about 75% of the baryonic mass of the universe.[1]
In everyday life on Earth, isolated hydrogen atoms (called "atomic hydrogen") are extremely rare. Instead, a hydrogen atom tends to combine with other atoms in compounds, or with another hydrogen atom to form ordinary (diatomic) hydrogen gas, H2. "Atomic hydrogen" and "hydrogen atom" in ordinary English use have overlapping, yet distinct, meanings. For example, a water molecule contains two hydrogen atoms, but does not contain atomic hydrogen (which would refer to isolated hydrogen atoms).
Atomic spectroscopy shows that there is a discrete infinite set of states in which a hydrogen (or any) atom can exist, contrary to the predictions of classical physics. Attempts to develop a theoretical understanding of the states of the hydrogen atom have been important to the history of quantum mechanics, since all other atoms can be roughly understood by knowing in detail about this simplest atomic structure.
See main article: Isotopes of hydrogen. The most abundant isotope, protium (1H), or light hydrogen, contains no neutrons and is simply a proton and an electron. Protium is stable and makes up 99.985% of naturally occurring hydrogen atoms.[2]
Deuterium (2H) contains one neutron and one proton in its nucleus. Deuterium is stable, makes up 0.0156% of naturally occurring hydrogen, and is used in industrial processes like nuclear reactors and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance.
Tritium (3H) contains two neutrons and one proton in its nucleus and is not stable, decaying with a half-life of 12.32 years. Because of its short half-life, tritium does not exist in nature except in trace amounts.
Heavier isotopes of hydrogen are only created artificially in particle accelerators and have half-lives on the order of 10−22 seconds. They are unbound resonances located beyond the neutron drip line; this results in prompt emission of a neutron.
The formulas below are valid for all three isotopes of hydrogen, but slightly different values of the Rydberg constant (correction formula given below) must be used for each hydrogen isotope.
See main article: hydrogen cation and hydrogen anion. Lone neutral hydrogen atoms are rare under normal conditions. However, neutral hydrogen is common when it is covalently bound to another atom, and hydrogen atoms can also exist in cationic and anionic forms.
If a neutral hydrogen atom loses its electron, it becomes a cation. The resulting ion, which consists solely of a proton for the usual isotope, is written as "H+" and sometimes called hydron. Free protons are common in the interstellar medium, and solar wind. In the context of aqueous solutions of classical Brønsted–Lowry acids, such as hydrochloric acid, it is actually hydronium, H3O+, that is meant. Instead of a literal ionized single hydrogen atom being formed, the acid transfers the hydrogen to H2O, forming H3O+.
If instead a hydrogen atom gains a second electron, it becomes an anion. The hydrogen anion is written as "H–" and called hydride.
The hydrogen atom has special significance in quantum mechanics and quantum field theory as a simple two-body problem physical system which has yielded many simple analytical solutions in closed-form.
Experiments by Ernest Rutherford in 1909 showed the structure of the atom to be a dense, positive nucleus with a tenuous negative charge cloud around it. This immediately raised questions about how such a system could be stable. Classical electromagnetism had shown that any accelerating charge radiates energy, as shown by the Larmor formula. If the electron is assumed to orbit in a perfect circle and radiates energy continuously, the electron would rapidly spiral into the nucleus with a fall time of:[3] where
a0
r0
See main article: Bohr model. In 1913, Niels Bohr obtained the energy levels and spectral frequencies of the hydrogen atom after making a number of simple assumptions in order to correct the failed classical model. The assumptions included:
Bohr supposed that the electron's angular momentum is quantized with possible values: where
n=1,2,3,\ldots
\hbar
2\pi
me
e
\varepsilon0
n
For
n=1
Rinfty
1Ry\equivhcRinfty.
The exact value of the Rydberg constant assumes that the nucleus is infinitely massive with respect to the electron. For hydrogen-1, hydrogen-2 (deuterium), and hydrogen-3 (tritium) which have finite mass, the constant must be slightly modified to use the reduced mass of the system, rather than simply the mass of the electron. This includes the kinetic energy of the nucleus in the problem, because the total (electron plus nuclear) kinetic energy is equivalent to the kinetic energy of the reduced mass moving with a velocity equal to the electron velocity relative to the nucleus. However, since the nucleus is much heavier than the electron, the electron mass and reduced mass are nearly the same. The Rydberg constant RM for a hydrogen atom (one electron), R is given bywhere
M
me/M,
There were still problems with Bohr's model:
\alpha2 ≈ 10-5
\alpha
Most of these shortcomings were resolved by Arnold Sommerfeld's modification of the Bohr model. Sommerfeld introduced two additional degrees of freedom, allowing an electron to move on an elliptical orbit characterized by its eccentricity and declination with respect to a chosen axis. This introduced two additional quantum numbers, which correspond to the orbital angular momentum and its projection on the chosen axis. Thus the correct multiplicity of states (except for the factor 2 accounting for the yet unknown electron spin) was found. Further, by applying special relativity to the elliptic orbits, Sommerfeld succeeded in deriving the correct expression for the fine structure of hydrogen spectra (which happens to be exactly the same as in the most elaborate Dirac theory). However, some observed phenomena, such as the anomalous Zeeman effect, remained unexplained. These issues were resolved with the full development of quantum mechanics and the Dirac equation. It is often alleged that the Schrödinger equation is superior to the Bohr–Sommerfeld theory in describing hydrogen atom. This is not the case, as most of the results of both approaches coincide or are very close (a remarkable exception is the problem of hydrogen atom in crossed electric and magnetic fields, which cannot be self-consistently solved in the framework of the Bohr–Sommerfeld theory), and in both theories the main shortcomings result from the absence of the electron spin. It was the complete failure of the Bohr–Sommerfeld theory to explain many-electron systems (such as helium atom or hydrogen molecule) which demonstrated its inadequacy in describing quantum phenomena.
The Schrödinger equation allows one to calculate the stationary states and also the time evolution of quantum systems. Exact analytical answers are available for the nonrelativistic hydrogen atom. Before we go to present a formal account, here we give an elementary overview.
Given that the hydrogen atom contains a nucleus and an electron, quantum mechanics allows one to predict the probability of finding the electron at any given radial distance
r
1s
Here,
a0
r
The
1s
r
4\pir2
P(r)dr
r
dr
It turns out that this is a maximum at
r=a0
a0
r
P(r)dr
As discussed below, the ground state
1s
(n=1,\ell=0,m=0)
(2,0,0)
(2,1,0)
(2,1,\pm1)
n=2
2s
2p
2s
2p
An electron in the
2s
2p
\mu=meM/(me+M)
Expanding the Laplacian in spherical coordinates:
This is a separable, partial differential equation which can be solved in terms of special functions. When the wavefunction is separated as product of functions
R(r)
\Theta(\theta)
\Phi(\varphi)
The normalized position wavefunctions, given in spherical coordinates are:
where:
\rho={2r\over{n
* | |
a | |
0}} |
* | |
a | |
0 |
* | |
a | |
0 |
={{4\pi\varepsilon0\hbar2}\over{\mue2}}
2\ell+1 | |
L | |
n-\ell-1 |
(\rho)
n-\ell-1
m | |
Y | |
\ell |
(\theta,\varphi)
\ell
m
Note that the generalized Laguerre polynomials are defined differently by different authors. The usage here is consistent with the definitions used by Messiah,[7] and Mathematica.[8] In other places, the Laguerre polynomial includes a factor of
(n+\ell)!
2\ell+1 | |
L | |
n+\ell |
(\rho)
The quantum numbers can take the following values:
n=1,2,3,\ldots
\ell=0,1,2,\ldots,n-1
m=-\ell,\ldots,\ell
Additionally, these wavefunctions are normalized (i.e., the integral of their modulus square equals 1) and orthogonal:where
|n,\ell,m\rangle
\psin
\delta
The wavefunctions in momentum space are related to the wavefunctions in position space through a Fourier transformwhich, for the bound states, results in[12] where
\alpha | |
C | |
N |
(x)
p
\hbar/
* | |
a | |
0 |
The solutions to the Schrödinger equation for hydrogen are analytical, giving a simple expression for the hydrogen energy levels and thus the frequencies of the hydrogen spectral lines and fully reproduced the Bohr model and went beyond it. It also yields two other quantum numbers and the shape of the electron's wave function ("orbital") for the various possible quantum-mechanical states, thus explaining the anisotropic character of atomic bonds.
The Schrödinger equation also applies to more complicated atoms and molecules. When there is more than one electron or nucleus the solution is not analytical and either computer calculations are necessary or simplifying assumptions must be made.
Since the Schrödinger equation is only valid for non-relativistic quantum mechanics, the solutions it yields for the hydrogen atom are not entirely correct. The Dirac equation of relativistic quantum theory improves these solutions (see below).
The solution of the Schrödinger equation (wave equation) for the hydrogen atom uses the fact that the Coulomb potential produced by the nucleus is isotropic (it is radially symmetric in space and only depends on the distance to the nucleus). Although the resulting energy eigenfunctions (the orbitals) are not necessarily isotropic themselves, their dependence on the angular coordinates follows completely generally from this isotropy of the underlying potential: the eigenstates of the Hamiltonian (that is, the energy eigenstates) can be chosen as simultaneous eigenstates of the angular momentum operator. This corresponds to the fact that angular momentum is conserved in the orbital motion of the electron around the nucleus. Therefore, the energy eigenstates may be classified by two angular momentum quantum numbers,
\ell
m
\ell=0,1,2,\ldots
m=-\ell,\ldots,+\ell
z
In addition to mathematical expressions for total angular momentum and angular momentum projection of wavefunctions, an expression for the radial dependence of the wave functions must be found. It is only here that the details of the
1/r
r
n=1,2,3,\ldots
Note that the maximum value of the angular momentum quantum number is limited by the principal quantum number: it can run only up to
n-1
\ell=0,1,\ldots,n-1
Due to angular momentum conservation, states of the same
\ell
m
n
\ell
1/r
Taking into account the spin of the electron adds a last quantum number, the projection of the electron's spin angular momentum along the
z
z
\ell
m'
z'
m
\ell
z
See main article: Hydrogen-like atom.
In 1928, Paul Dirac found an equation that was fully compatible with special relativity, and (as a consequence) made the wave function a 4-component "Dirac spinor" including "up" and "down" spin components, with both positive and "negative" energy (or matter and antimatter). The solution to this equation gave the following results, more accurate than the Schrödinger solution.
The energy levels of hydrogen, including fine structure (excluding Lamb shift and hyperfine structure), are given by the Sommerfeld fine-structure expression:[13] where
\alpha
j
\left|\ell\pm\tfrac{1}{2}\right|
See main article: Atomic orbital. The image to the right shows the first few hydrogen atom orbitals (energy eigenfunctions). These are cross-sections of the probability density that are color-coded (black represents zero density and white represents the highest density). The angular momentum (orbital) quantum number ℓ is denoted in each column, using the usual spectroscopic letter code (s means ℓ = 0, p means ℓ = 1, d means ℓ = 2). The main (principal) quantum number n (= 1, 2, 3, ...) is marked to the right of each row. For all pictures the magnetic quantum number m has been set to 0, and the cross-sectional plane is the xz-plane (z is the vertical axis). The probability density in three-dimensional space is obtained by rotating the one shown here around the z-axis.
The "ground state", i.e. the state of lowest energy, in which the electron is usually found, is the first one, the 1s state (principal quantum level n = 1, ℓ = 0).
Black lines occur in each but the first orbital: these are the nodes of the wavefunction, i.e. where the probability density is zero. (More precisely, the nodes are spherical harmonics that appear as a result of solving the Schrödinger equation in spherical coordinates.)
The quantum numbers determine the layout of these nodes. There are:
n-1
\ell
m
\varphi
\ell-m
\theta
n-\ell-1
The frequency of a state in level n is
\omegan=En/\hbar
i\omega1t | |
\psi=\psi | |
1e |
i\omega2t | |
+\psi | |
2e |
i\omega1t | |
P(t)=|\psi| | |
1e |
i\omega2t | |
+\psi | |
2e |
-i\omega1t | |
)(\psi | |
1e |
-i\omega2t | |
+\psi | |
2e |
)
\propto|\psi1\psi2|\cos{[(\omega1-\omega2)t]}
There are several important effects that are neglected by the Schrödinger equation and which are responsible for certain small but measurable deviations of the real spectral lines from the predicted ones:
Both of these features (and more) are incorporated in the relativistic Dirac equation, with predictions that come still closer to experiment. Again the Dirac equation may be solved analytically in the special case of a two-body system, such as the hydrogen atom. The resulting solution quantum states now must be classified by the total angular momentum number (arising through the coupling between electron spin and orbital angular momentum). States of the same and the same are still degenerate. Thus, direct analytical solution of Dirac equation predicts 2S and 2P levels of hydrogen to have exactly the same energy, which is in a contradiction with observations (Lamb–Retherford experiment).
For these developments, it was essential that the solution of the Dirac equation for the hydrogen atom could be worked out exactly, such that any experimentally observed deviation had to be taken seriously as a signal of failure of the theory.
In the language of Heisenberg's matrix mechanics, the hydrogen atom was first solved by Wolfgang Pauli[15] using a rotational symmetry in four dimensions [O(4)-symmetry] generated by the angular momentumand the Laplace–Runge–Lenz vector. By extending the symmetry group O(4) to the dynamical group O(4,2),the entire spectrum and all transitions were embedded in a single irreducible group representation.[16]
In 1979 the (non-relativistic) hydrogen atom was solved for the first time within Feynman's path integral formulationof quantum mechanics by Duru and Kleinert.[17] [18] This work greatly extended the range of applicability of Feynman's method.