3.2 The Bohr Model
key concepts and summary
Bohr incorporated Planck's and Einstein's quantization ideas into a model of the hydrogen atom that resolved the paradox of atom stability and discrete spectra. The Bohr model of the hydrogen atom explains the connection between the quantization of photons and the quantized emission from atoms. Bohr described the hydrogen atom in terms of an electron moving in a circular orbit about a nucleus. He postulated that the electron was restricted to certain orbits characterized by discrete energies. Transitions between these allowed orbits result in the absorption or emission of photons. When an electron moves from a higher-energy orbit to a more stable one, energy is emitted in the form of a photon. To move an electron from a stable orbit to a more excited one, a photon of energy must be absorbed. Using the Bohr model, we can calculate the energy of an electron and the radius of its orbit in any one-electron system.
key equations
En=−kZ2n2,n=1,2,3,...En=−kZ2n2,n=1,2,3,... ΔE=kZ2(1n21−1n22)ΔE=kZ2(1n12−1n22) r=n2Za0r=n2Za0
quantum number
integer number having only specific allowed values and used to characterize the arrangement of electrons in an atom
excited state
state having an energy greater than the ground-state energy
ground state
state in which the electrons in an atom, ion, or molecule have the lowest energy possible
Bohr's model of the hydrogen atom
structural model in which an electron moves around the nucleus only in circular orbits, each with a specific allowed radius; the orbiting electron does not normally emit electromagnetic radiation, but does so when changing from one orbit to another.