Helium atom
Helium-4
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Names | |
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Systematic IUPAC name
Helium[1] | |
Identifiers | |
3D model (JSmol)
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ChEBI | |
ChemSpider | |
EC Number |
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16294 | |
KEGG | |
MeSH | Helium |
PubChem CID
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RTECS number |
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UNII | |
UN number | 1046 |
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Properties | |
He | |
Molar mass | 4.002602 g·mol−1 |
Appearance | Colourless gas |
Boiling point | −269 °C (−452.20 °F; 4.15 K) |
Thermochemistry | |
Std molar
entropy (S⦵298) |
126.151-126.155 J K−1 mol−1 |
Pharmacology | |
V03AN03 (WHO) | |
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
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A helium atom is an atom of the chemical element helium. Helium is composed of two electrons bound by the electromagnetic force to a nucleus containing two protons along with two neutrons, depending on the isotope, held together by the strong force. Unlike for hydrogen, a closed-form solution to the Schrödinger equation for the helium atom has not been found. However, various approximations, such as the Hartree–Fock method, can be used to estimate the ground state energy and wavefunction of the atom. Historically, the first such helium spectrum calculation was done by Albrecht Unsöld in 1927.[2] Its success was considered to be one of the earliest signs of validity of Schrödinger's wave mechanics.[3]
Introduction
The quantum mechanical description of the helium atom is of special interest, because it is the simplest multi-electron system and can be used to understand the concept of quantum entanglement. The Hamiltonian of helium, considered as a three-body system of two electrons and a nucleus and after separating out the centre-of-mass motion, can be written as[citation needed]
where is the reduced mass of an electron with respect to the nucleus, and are the electron-nucleus distance vectors and . It is important to note that it operates not in normal space, but in a 6-dimensional configuration space . The nuclear charge, is 2 for helium. In the approximation of an infinitely heavy nucleus, we have and the mass polarization term disappears, so that in operator language, the Hamiltonian simplifies to:
The wavefunction belongs to the tensor product of combined spin states and combined spatial wavefunctions, and since this Hamiltonian only acts on spatial wavefunctions, we can neglect spin states until after solving the spatial wavefunction. This is possible since, for any general vector, one has that where is a combined spatial wavefunction and is the combined spin component. The Hamiltonian operator, since it only acts on the spatial component, gives the eigenvector equation:
which implies that one should find solutions for where is a general combined spatial wavefunction. This energy, however, is not degenerate with multiplicity given by the dimension of the space of combined spin states because of a symmetrization postulate, which requires that physical solutions for identical fermions should be totally antisymmetric, imposing a restriction on the choice of based on solutions . Hence the solutions are of the form: where is the energy eigenket spatial wavefunction and is a spin wavefunction such that is antisymmetric and is merely some superpostion of these states.
Since the Hamiltonian is independent of spin, it commutes with all spin operators. Since it is also rotationally invariant, the total x, y or z component of angular momentum operator also commutes with the Hamiltonian. From these commutation relations, and also commutes with the Hamiltonian which implies that energy is independent of and . Although the purely spatial form of the Hamiltonian implies that the energy is independent of , this would only be true in the absence of symmetrization postulate. Due to the symmetrization postulate, the choice of will influence the type of wavefunction required by symmetrization postulate which would in turn influence the energy of the state.[4]
Other operators that commute with the Hamiltonian are the spatial exchange operator and the parity operator. However a good combination of mutually commuting operators are: , , , and . Hence the final solutions are given as:
where the energy is fold degenerate. For electrons, the total spin can have values of 0 or 1. A state with the quantum numbers: principal quantum number , total spin , angular quantum number and total angular momentum is denoted by .
States corresponding to , are called parahelium (singlet state, so called as there exist state) and are called orthohelium (triplet state, so called as there exist states). Since the spin exchange operator can be expressed in terms of dot product of spin vectors, eigenkets of spin exchange operators are also eigenkets of . Hence parahelium can also be said to be the spin anti-symmetric state (singlet state) or orthohelium to be spin symmetric state (triplet state).[4]
The singlet state is given as:
and triplet states are given as:
as per symmetrization and total spin number requirement. It is observed that triplet states are symmetric and singlet states are antisymmetric. Since the total wavefunction is antisymmetric, a symmetric spatial wavefunction can only be paired with antisymmetric wavefunction and vice versa. Hence orthohelium (triplet state) has a symmetric spin wavefunction but an antisymmetric spatial wavefunction and parahelium (singlet state) has an antisymmetric spin wavefunction but a symmetric spatial wavefunction. Hence the type of wavefunction of each state is given above. The degeneracy solely comes from this spatial wavefunction. Note that for , there is no degeneracy in spatial wavefunction.
Alternatively, a more generalized representation of the above can be provided without considering the spatial and spin parts separately. This method is useful in situations where such manipulation is not possible, however, it can be applied wherever needed. Since the spin part is tensor product of spin Hilbert vector spaces, its basis can be represented by tensor product of each of the set, with each of the set, . Note that here but are in fact orthogonal. In the considered approximation (Pauli approximation), the wave function can be represented as a second order spinor with 4 components , where the indices describe the spin projection of both electrons in this coordinate system.[5][better source needed] The usual normalization condition, , follows from the orthogonality of all elements. This general spinor can be written as 2×2 matrix:
If the Hamiltonian had been spin dependent, we would not have been able to treat each these components independently as shown previously since the Hamiltonian need not act in the same manner for all four components.
The matrix can also be represented as a linear combination of any given basis of four orthogonal (in the vector-space of 2×2 matrices) constant matrices with scalar function coefficients as .
A convenient basis consists of one anti-symmetric matrix (with total spin , corresponding to a singlet state)
and three symmetric matrices (with total spin , corresponding to a triplet state)
It is easy to show, that the singlet state is invariant under all rotations (a scalar entity), while the triplet are spherical vector tensor representations of an ordinary space vector , with the three components: Since all spin interaction terms between the four components of in the above (scalar) Hamiltonian are neglected (e.g. an external magnetic field, or relativistic effects, like angular momentum coupling), the four Schrödinger equations can be solved independently.[6][4] This is identical to the previously discussed method of finding spatial wavefunction eigenstates independently of the spin states, here spatial wavefunctions of different spin states correspond to the different components of the matrix.
The spin here only comes into play through the Pauli exclusion principle, which for fermions (like electrons) requires antisymmetry under simultaneous exchange of spin and coordinates (totally antisymmetric wavefunction condition)
Parahelium is then the singlet state with a symmetric spatial function and orthohelium is the triplet state with an antisymmetric spatial function .
Approximation methods
Following from the above approximation, effectively reducing three body problem to two body problem, we have:
This Hamiltonian for helium with two electrons can be written as a sum of two terms:
where the zero-order unperturbed Hamiltonian is
while the perturbation term:
is the electron-electron interaction. H0 is just the sum of the two hydrogenic Hamiltonians: whereare independent Coulomb field Hamiltonian of each electron. Since the unperturbed Hamiltonian is a sum of two independent Hamiltonians (i.e. are separable), the wavefunction must be of form where and are eigenkets of and respectively.[7] However, the spatial wavefunction of the form need not correspond to physical states of identical electrons as per the symmetrization postulate. Thus, to obtain physical solutions symmetrization of the wavefunctions and is carried out.
The proper wave function then must be composed of the symmetric (+) and antisymmetric(−) linear combinations:or for the special cases of (both electrons have identical quantum numbers, parahelium only): .
This explains the absence of the state (with ) for orthohelium, where consequently (with ) is the metastable ground state.
Note that all wavefunction obtained thus far cannot be separated into wavefunctions of each particle (even for electrons with identical and where wavefunction is because then, the spin of the electrons are in a superposition of different spin states: and from ) i.e. the wavefunctions are always in superposition of some kind. In other words, one cannot completely determine states of particle 1 and 2, or measurements of all details, of each electrons cannot be made on one particle without affecting the other. This follows since the wavefunction is always a superposition of different states where each electron has unique . This is in agreement with Pauli exclusion principle.
We can infer from these wavefunctions that .
The corresponding energies are:
A good theoretical descriptions of helium including the perturbation term can be obtained within the Hartree–Fock and Thomas–Fermi approximations (see below).
The Hartree–Fock method is used for a variety of atomic systems. However it is just an approximation, and there are more accurate and efficient methods used today to solve atomic systems. The "many-body problem" for helium and other few electron systems can be solved quite accurately. For example, the ground state of helium is known to fifteen digits. In Hartree–Fock theory, the electrons are assumed to move in a potential created by the nucleus and the other electrons.
Ground state of Helium: Perturbation method
Since ground state corresponds to (1,0,0) state, there can only be one representation of such wavefunction whose spatial wavefunction is:
We note that the ground state energy of unperturbed helium atom as:Which is 30% larger than experimental data.
We can find the first order correction in energy due to electron repulsion in Hamiltonian :
The energy for ground state of helium in first order becomes compared to its experimental value of −79.005154539(25) eV.[8] A better approximation for ground state energy is obtained by choosing better trial wavefunction in variational method.
Screening effect
The energy that we obtained is too low because the repulsion term between the electrons was ignored, whose effect is to raise the energy levels. As Z gets bigger, our approach should yield better results, since the electron-electron repulsion term will get smaller. V(r) is a central potential which is chosen so that the effect of the perturbation is small. The net effect of each electron on the motion of the other one is to screen somewhat the charge of the nucleus, so a simple guess for V(r) is where S is a screening constant and the quantity Ze is the effective charge. The potential is a Coulomb interaction, so the corresponding individual electron energies are given by and the corresponding spatial wave function is given by If Ze was 1.70, that would make the expression above for the ground state energy agree with the experimental value E0 = −2.903 a.u. of the ground state energy of helium. Since Z = 2 in this case, the screening constant is S = 0.30. For the ground state of helium, for the average shielding approximation, the screening effect of each electron on the other one is equivalent to about of the electric charge.[9]
Ground state of Helium: The variational method
To obtain a more accurate energy the variational principle can be applied to the electron-electron potential Vee using the wave function
After integrating this, the result is:
This is closer to the experimental value, but if a better trial wave function is used, an even more accurate answer could be obtained. An ideal wave function would be one that doesn't ignore the influence of the other electron. In other words, each electron represents a cloud of negative charge which somewhat shields the nucleus so that the other electron actually sees an effective nuclear charge Z that is less than 2. A wave function of this type is given by:
Treating Z as a variational parameter to minimize H. The Hamiltonian using the wave function above is given by:
After calculating the expectation value of and Vee the expectation value of the Hamiltonian becomes:
The minimum value of Z needs to be calculated, so taking a derivative with respect to Z and setting the equation to 0 will give the minimum value of Z:
This shows that the other electron somewhat shields the nucleus reducing the effective charge from 2 to 1.69. This result matches with experimental results closely as well as the calculations of effective Z in screening effect. Hence, we obtain the most accurate result yet:
Where again, E1 represents the ionization energy of hydrogen.[10]
By using more complicated/accurate wave functions, the ground state energy of helium has been calculated closer and closer to the experimental value −79.005154539(25) eV.[8] The variational approach has been refined to very high accuracy for a comprehensive regime of quantum states by G.W.F. Drake and co-workers[11][12][13] as well as J.D. Morgan III, Jonathan Baker and Robert Hill[14][15][16] using Hylleraas or Frankowski-Pekeris basis functions. One needs to include relativistic and quantum electrodynamic corrections to get full agreement with experiment to spectroscopic accuracy.[17][18]
Perturbation theory for Helium
Consider the same setting where unperturbed Hamiltonian is:and perturbation is electron repulsion: .
In general, for (1s)(nl) state, in first order perturbation theory:with:where I is known as direct integral and J is known as exchange integral or exchange energy. If the combined spatial wavefunction is symmetric, its energy level has the + symbol in , whereas for the antisymmetric combined spatial wavefunction, has a minus symbol. Since due to the symmetrization postulate, the combined spatial wavefunctions differ on symmetric or antisymmetric nature, the J term is responsible for the splitting of energy levels between ortho and para helium states.
They are calculated as:[3]
The first integral is said to be analogous to classical potential due to Coulomb interaction, where the squares of wavefunctions are interpreted as electron density. However, no such classical analog exists for the J term. Using Green's theorem, one can show that the J terms are always positive.[19] From these, the diagram for energy level splitting can be roughly sketched. It also follows that for these states of helium, the energy of parallel spins cannot be more than that of antiparallel spins.
First excited state of Helium
Experimental value of ionization energy
Helium's first ionization energy is −24.587387936(25) eV.[20] This value was measured experimentally.[21] The theoretic value of Helium atom's second ionization energy is −54.41776311(2) eV.[20] The total ground state energy of the helium atom is −79.005154539(25) eV,[8] or −2.90338583(13) Atomic units a.u., which equals −5.80677166(26) Ry.
See also
References
- ^ "Helium - PubChem Public Chemical Database". The PubChem Project. USA: National Center for Biotechnology Information.
- ^ Unsöld, Ann. Phys., 82 (1927) 355
- ^ a b Sakurai, J. J.; Napolitano, Jim (2017-09-21). Modern Quantum Mechanics. Cambridge University Press. pp. 455–459. doi:10.1017/9781108499996. ISBN 978-1-108-49999-6.
- ^ a b c Littlejohn, Robert. "Helium" (PDF).
- ^ Rennert, P.; Schmiedel, H.; Weißmantel, C. (1988). Kleine Enzyklopädie Physik (in German). VEB Bibliographisches Institut Leipzig. pp. 192–194. ISBN 3-323-00011-0.
- ^ Landau, L. D.; Lifschitz, E. M. (1971). Lehrbuch der Theoretischen Physik (in German). Vol. Bd. III (Quantenmechanik). Berlin: Akademie-Verlag. Kap. IX, pp. 218. OCLC 25750516.
- ^ Shankar, R. (1994). Principles of Quantum Mechanics. p. 274. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-0576-8. ISBN 978-1-4757-0578-2.
- ^ a b c Kramida, Alexander; Ralchenko, Yuri (2009-07-21). "Atomic Spectra Database". NIST. doi:10.18434/t4w30f.
- ^ Bransden, B. H.; Joachain, C. J. Physics of Atoms and Molecules (2nd ed.). Pearson Education.
- ^ Griffiths, David I. (2005). Introduction to Quantum Mechanics (Second ed.). Pearson Education.
- ^ Drake, G.W.F.; Van, Zong-Chao (1994). "Variational eigenvalues for the S states of helium". Chemical Physics Letters. 229 (4–5). Elsevier BV: 486–490. Bibcode:1994CPL...229..486D. doi:10.1016/0009-2614(94)01085-4. ISSN 0009-2614.
- ^ Yan, Zong-Chao; Drake, G. W. F. (1995-06-12). "High Precision Calculation of Fine Structure Splittings in Helium and He-Like Ions". Physical Review Letters. 74 (24). American Physical Society (APS): 4791–4794. Bibcode:1995PhRvL..74.4791Y. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.74.4791. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 10058600.
- ^ Drake, G. W. F. (1999). "High Precision Theory of Atomic Helium". Physica Scripta. T83 (1). IOP Publishing: 83–92. Bibcode:1999PhST...83...83D. doi:10.1238/physica.topical.083a00083. ISSN 0031-8949.
- ^ J.D. Baker, R.N. Hill, and J.D. Morgan III (1989), "High Precision Calculation of Helium Atom Energy Levels", in AIP ConferenceProceedings 189, Relativistic, Quantum Electrodynamic, and Weak Interaction Effects in Atoms (AIP, New York),123
- ^ Baker, Jonathan D.; Freund, David E.; Hill, Robert Nyden; Morgan, John D. (1990-02-01). "Radius of convergence and analytic behavior of the 1/Z expansion". Physical Review A. 41 (3). American Physical Society (APS): 1247–1273. Bibcode:1990PhRvA..41.1247B. doi:10.1103/physreva.41.1247. ISSN 1050-2947. PMID 9903218.
- ^ Scott, T. C.; Lüchow, A.; Bressanini, D.; Morgan, J. D. III (2007). "The Nodal Surfaces of Helium Atom Eigenfunctions" (PDF). Phys. Rev. A. 75 (6): 060101. Bibcode:2007PhRvA..75f0101S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.75.060101. hdl:11383/1679348.
- ^ Drake, G. W. F.; Yan, Zong-Chao (1992-09-01). "Energies and relativistic corrections for the Rydberg states of helium: Variational results and asymptotic analysis". Physical Review A. 46 (5). American Physical Society (APS): 2378–2409. Bibcode:1992PhRvA..46.2378D. doi:10.1103/physreva.46.2378. ISSN 1050-2947. PMID 9908396. S2CID 36134307.
- ^ G.W.F. Drake (2006). "Springer Handbook of Atomic, molecular, and Optical Physics", Edited by G.W.F. Drake (Springer, New York), 199-219. [1]
- ^ Quantum Theory of Atomic Structure. Vol. I. McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. 1960. pp. 486–487. ISBN 978-0070580404.
- ^ a b Kramida, A.; Ralchenko, Yu.; Reader, J., and NIST ASD Team. "NIST Atomic Spectra Database Ionization Energies Data". Gaithersburg, MD: NIST.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ D. Z. Kandula; C. Gohle; T. J. Pinkert; W. Ubachs; K. S. E. Eikema (2010). "Extreme Ultraviolet Frequency Comb Metrology". Phys. Rev. Lett. 105 (6): 063001. arXiv:1004.5110. Bibcode:2010PhRvL.105f3001K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.063001. PMID 20867977. S2CID 2499460.