Review
Review
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Quantum Chemistry
Introduction:
Quantum chemistry focus on the applications of quantum mechanics to chemical systems. It was
thought that the motion of atoms and subatomic particles could be expressed using classical
mechanics, the laws of motion introduced in the seventeenth century by Newton, these laws were
very successful at explaining the motion of everyday objects and planets. However, towards the
end of the nineteenth century, experimental evidence show that classical mechanics failed when
it was applied to particles as small as electrons, and it took until the 1920s to discover the
concepts and equations for describing them. So, the concepts of quantum mechanics were
described.
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Electromagnetic radiation which classical physics treats as wave-like actually also show the
characteristics of particles. Another experiment shows that electrons which classical physics
treats as particles, also display the characteristics of waves.
a) Particle character of electromagnetic radiation:
The Planck treatment of black-body radiation introduced the idea that an oscillator of frequency
ν can have only the energies 1hν, 2hν and so on. This quantization leads to suggestion that
particles of electromagnetic radiation are now called photons. The existence of photons is only a
suggestion till the experimental evidence for their existence comes from the measurement of the
energies of electrons produced in the photoelectric effect, which is a process of ejection of
electrons from metals when they are exposed to ultraviolet radiation. Observations of the
photoelectric effect strongly suggest that a particle-like projectile collides with the metal and, if
the kinetic energy of the projectile is high enough, an electron is ejected. , the conservation of
energy implies that hν = K.E + Φ or K.E = hν – Φ.
b) Wave character of electromagnetic radiation:
The concept that radiations consist of particles were discarded until Davisson and Germer, who
observed the diffraction of electrons by a crystal. The Davisson and Germer experiment, which
has been repeated with other particles (including α particles, molecular hydrogen, and neutrons),
shows clearly that particles have wave-like properties. At almost the same time, G.P. Thomson
showed that a beam of electrons was diffracted when passed through a thin gold foil.
Some progress for wave-particle duality had already been made by Louis de Broglie who, in
1924, suggested that any particle, not only photons, travelling with a linear momentum p = mv
should have in some sense a wavelength given by what is now called the de Broglie relation: λ =
h
p
Compton Effect:
In 1923 A.H. Compton provided one more proof to the
quantum theory and presented Compton Effect, stated as
“ When X-rays of wavelength λ' struck a sample of
graphite, an electron was ejected and the X-rays
scattered at an angle θ had longer wavelength λ”. Thus
he argued that light radiation (X-rays) consisted of
particles (photons), as a continuous wave could not have
knocked out the electron. He visualized that a photon of
incident light struck a stationary electron in graphite. Figure 2
Hence lost some energy which resulted in the increase of wavelength. This process could not
have occurred unless light radiation consisted of particles or photons. By assuming photon-
electron collisions to be perfectly elastic, Compton found that the shift in wavelength, dλ was
2h 2 θ
given by the expression, dλ = sin .So h is Planck’s constant, m the mass of an electron, c
mc 2
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the velocity of light and θ the angle of scattering. The expression shows that dλ is independent of
the nature of the substance and wavelength of the incident radiation.
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There exists a clear difference between the behavior of large objects like a stone and small
particles such as electrons. The uncertainty product is negligible in case of large objects.
Conclusion:
So we reviews some of the basic principles of quantum mechanics. First, the experimental results
that overthrew the concepts of classical physics. These experiments led to the conclusion that
particles may not have an arbitrary energy and that the classical concepts of ‘particle’ and ‘wave’
blend together. The overthrow of classical mechanics inspired the formulation of a new set of
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concepts and led to the formulation of quantum mechanics. In quantum mechanics, all the
properties of a system are expressed in terms of a wave function that is obtained by solving the
Schrodinger equation. We see how to interpret wave functions. Finally, we analyze some of the
techniques of quantum mechanics in terms of operators, and see that they lead to the uncertainty
principle, one of the most profound departures from classical mechanics.