L=4 subshell??
In periodic table, max. value n (principal quantum no) can take is 7,so l (azimuthal quantum no) can take 6 as its max value. Then why we talk about only s,p, d,f subshells (i.e. l=0,1,2,3)? What about l=4,5,6? Which are those subshells?
In periodic table, max. value n (principal quantum no) can take is 7,so l (azimuthal quantum no) can take 6 as its max value. Then why we talk about only s,p, d,f subshells (i.e. l=0,1,2,3)? What about l=4,5,6? Which are those subshells?
1 Answer
Because atoms thus far have not needed to use
We're already at the point where we'd have to synthesize our own heavy elements that are hardly stable...
A
Thus, it is very easy for electrons to get pushed out of those orbitals due to high-order electron correlation to populate the nearest
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There are
#12# so-called "Aufbau exceptions" in the entire#d# -block:#"Cr, Cu, Nb, Mo, Ru, Rh, Pd, Ag, Pt, Au, Ds, Lr"# , which is within FOUR rows of elements. That's#30%# of the#d# -block. -
There are
#10# so-called "Aufbau exceptions" in the entire#f# -block:#"La, Ce, Gd, Lu, Ac, Th, Pa, U, Np, Cm"# (except this is within TWO rows of elements). That's nearly#36%# of the#f# -block. -
You would likely find more "Aufbau exceptions" among such "g-block" elements than you did in the lanthanides and actinides. Perhaps about
#42%# of the#g# -block?
These are the
whereas these are the
An