The Bohr
model, introduced by Danish physicist Niels Bohr in 1913, was a key step on the
journey to understand atoms.
Ancient
Greek thinkers already believed that matter was composed of tiny basic
particles that couldn't be divided further. It took more than 2,000 years for
science to advance enough to prove this theory right. The journey to
understanding atoms and their inner workings was long and complicated.
It was
British chemist John Dalton who in the early 19th century revived the ideas of
ancient Greeks that matter was composed of tiny indivisible particles called
atoms. Dalton believed that every chemical element consisted of atoms of
distinct properties that could be combined into various compounds, according to
Britannica.
Dalton's
theories were correct in many aspects, apart from that basic premise that atoms
were the smallest component of matter that couldn't be broken down into
anything smaller. About a hundred years after Dalton, physicists started
discovering that the atom was, in fact, really quite complex inside.
British
physicist Joseph John Thomson made the first major breakthrough in the
understanding of atoms in 1897 when he discovered that atoms contained tiny
negatively charged particles that he called electrons. Thomson thought that
electrons floated in a positively charged "soup" inside the atomic sphere,
according to Khan Academy.
14 years
later, New Zealand-born Ernest Rutherford, Thomson's former student, challenged
this depiction of the atom when he found in experiments that the atom must have
a small positively charged nucleus sitting at its center.
Based on
this finding, Rutherford then developed a new atom model, the Rutherford model.
According to this model, the atom no longer consisted of just electrons
floating in a soup but had a tiny central nucleus, which contained most of the
atom's mass. Around this nucleus, the electrons revolved similarly to planets
orbiting the sun in our solar system, according to Britannica.
Some
questions, however, remained unanswered. For example, how was it possible that
the electrons didn't collapse onto the nucleus, since their opposite charge
would mean they should be attracted to it? Several physicists tried to answer
this question including Rutherford's student Niels Bohr.
Bohr was the first physicist to look to the then-emerging quantum theory to try to explain the behavior of the particles inside the simplest of all atoms; the atom of hydrogen. Hydrogen atoms consist of a heavy nucleus with one positively-charged proton around which a single, much smaller and lighter, negatively charged electron orbits. The whole system looks a little bit like the sun with only one planet orbiting it.
Bohr
tried to explain the connection between the distance of the electron from the
nucleus, the electron's energy and the light absorbed by the hydrogen atom,
using one great novelty of physics of that era: the Planck constant.
The
Planck constant was a result of the investigation of German physicist Max
Planck into the properties of electromagnetic radiation of a hypothetical
perfect object called the black body.
Strangely,
Planck discovered that this radiation, including light, is emitted not in a
continuum but rather in discrete packets of energy that can only be multiples
of a certain fixed value, according to Physics World.That fixed value became
the Planck constant. Max Planck called these packets of energy quanta,
providing a name to the completely new type of physics that was set to turn the
scientists' understanding of our world upside down.
What
role does the Planck constant play in the hydrogen atom? Despite the nice
comparison, the hydrogen atom is not exactly like the solar system. The
electron doesn't orbit its sun —the nucleus — at a fixed distance, but can skip
between different orbits based on how much energy it carries, Bohr postulated.
It may orbit at the distance of Mercury, then jump to Earth, then to Mars.
The
electron doesn't slide between the orbits gradually, but makes discrete jumps
when it reaches the correct energy level, quite in line with Planck's theory,
physicist Ali Hayek explains on his YouTube channel.
Bohr
believed that there was a fixed number of orbits that the electron could travel
in. When the electron absorbs energy, it jumps to a higher orbital shell. When
it loses energy by radiating it out, it drops to a lower orbit. If the electron
reaches the highest orbital shell and continues absorbing energy, it will fly
out of the atom altogether.
The ratio between the energy of the electron and the frequency of the radiation it emits is equal to the Planck constant. The energy of the light emitted or absorbed is exactly equal to the difference between the energies of the orbits and is inversely proportional to the wavelength of the light absorbed by the electron, according to Ali Hayek.
Using
his model, Bohr was able to calculate the spectral lines — the lines in the
continuous spectrum of light — that the hydrogen atoms would absorb.
Once
Bohr tried to use his model to predict the spectral lines of more complex
atoms, the results became progressively skewed.
There
are two reasons why Bohr's model doesn't work for atoms with more than one
electron, according to the Chemistry Channel. First, the interaction of multiple
atoms makes their energy structure more difficult to predict.
Bohr's
model also didn't take into account some of the key quantum physics principles,
most importantly the odd and mind-boggling fact that particles are also waves,
according to the educational website Khan Academy.
As a
result of quantum mechanics, the motion of the electrons around the nucleus
cannot be exactly predicted. It is impossible to pinpoint the velocity and
position of an electron at any point in time. The shells in which these
electrons orbit are therefore not simple lines but rather diffuse, less defined
clouds.
Only a
few years after the model's publication, physicists started improving Bohr's
work based on the newly discovered principles of particle behavior. Eventually,
the much more complicated quantum mechanical model emerged, superseding the
Bohr model. But because things get far
less neat when all the quantum principles are in place, the Bohr model
is probably still the first thing most physics students discover in their quest
to understand what governs matter in the microworld.
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