What is the radius of hydrogen

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What is the radius of hydrogen

1H

Available hydrogen properties...

One measure of size is the element-element distance within the element. It is not always easy to make sensible comparisons between the elements however as some bonds are quite short because of multiple bonding (for instance the O=O distance in O2 is short because of the the double bond connecting the two atoms. The bond length in HH is: 74.130pm.

There are several other ways ways to define radius for atoms and ions. Follow the appropriate hyperlinks for literature references and definitions of each type of radius. All values of radii are given in picometres (pm). Conversion factors are:

  • 1 pm = 1 × 10‑12 metre (meter)
  • 100 pm = 1 Ångstrom
  • 1000 pm = 1 nanometre (nm, nanometer)

Neutral radii

The size of neutral atoms depends upon the way in which the measurement is made and the environment. Follow the appropriate hyperlinks for definitions of each radius type. The term "atomic radius" is not particularly helpful although its use is widespread. The problem is its meaning, which is clearly very different in different sources and books. Two values are given here, one is based upon calculations and the other upon observation - follow the appropriate link for further details.

What is the radius of hydrogen
Image showing periodicity of atomic radius for the chemical elements as size-coded balls on a periodic table grid.
What is the radius of hydrogen
Image showing periodicity of single bond covalent radius for the chemical elements as size-coded balls on a periodic table grid.

Valence shell orbital radii

The following are calculated values of valence shell orbital radii, Rmax

What is the radius of hydrogen
Image showing periodicity of valence s-orbital radius for the chemical elements as size-coded balls on a periodic table grid.

References

The Rmax values for neutral gaseous element valence orbitals are abstracted from reference 1.

  1. J.B. Mann, Atomic Structure Calculations II. Hartree-Fock wave functions and radial expectation values: hydrogen to lawrencium, LA-3691, Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, USA, 1968.

Ionic radii

This table gives some ionic radii. In this table, geometry refers to the arrangment of the ion's nearest neighbours. Size does depend upon geometry and environment. For electronic configurations, where it matters, the values given for octahedral species are low spin unless stated to be high spin. The terms low spin and high spin refer to the electronic configurations of particular geomtries of certain d-block metal ions. Further information is available in inorganic chemistry textbooks, usually at Level 1 or First Year University level. For definitions of ionic radius and further information, follow the hypertext link.

Ion Coordination type Radius / pm Periodicity link
No ionic radii for H

Pauling ionic radii

This table shows Pauling radii for hydrogen
Ion Pauling radius / pm Periodicity link
H(I) -
What is the radius of hydrogen
H(-I)208
What is the radius of hydrogen

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I have seen online two different values: 53 pm and 32 pm. What is the correct value?

The Bohr radius, symbolized a , is the mean radius of the orbit of an electron around the nucleus of a hydrogen atom at its ground state (lowest-energy level). The value of this radius is a physical constant; a is approximately equal to 5.29177 x 10 -11 meter (m). This is 5.29177 x 10 -9 centimeter (cm) or 0.0529177 nanometer (nm). This is a span equivalent to about 1/10,000 of the wavelength of a ray of blue visible light.

The Bohr radius is based on the so-called Bohr model of the atom, named after the Danish physicist and philosopher Niels Bohr (1884-1962). Bohr envisioned atoms as consisting of small, dense nuclei with positive electric charge, around which negatively charged electrons orbit in circular paths. Nowadays, physicists consider this an oversimplification; the electrons are thought to surround the nucleus in spherical probability zones called shells. However, the Bohr radius is still a useful constant because, in a sense, it represents the smallest mean radius normally attainable by a neutral atom.

Also see Table of Physical Units and Constants.

The Bohr radius (a0) is a physical constant, approximately equal to the most probable distance between the nucleus and the electron in a hydrogen atom in its ground state. It is named after Niels Bohr, due to its role in the Bohr model of an atom. Its value is 5.29177210903(80)×10−11 m.[1][2]

Bohr radiusSymbola0 or rBohrNamed afterNiels BohrApproximate values (to three significant digits)SI units5.29×10−11 mnatural units3.27×1024 ℓP

The Bohr radius is defined as[3]

a 0 = 4 π ε 0 ℏ 2 e 2 m e = ε 0 h 2 π e 2 m e = ℏ m e c α , {\displaystyle a_{0}={\frac {4\pi \varepsilon _{0}\hbar ^{2}}{e^{2}m_{\text{e}}}}={\frac {\varepsilon _{0}h^{2}}{\pi e^{2}m_{\text{e}}}}={\frac {\hbar }{m_{\text{e}}c\alpha }},}

 

where

  • ε 0 {\displaystyle \varepsilon _{0}}   is the permittivity of free space,
  • ℏ {\displaystyle \hbar }   is the reduced Planck constant,
  • m e {\displaystyle m_{\text{e}}}   is the mass of an electron,
  • e {\displaystyle e}   is the elementary charge,
  • c {\displaystyle c}   is the speed of light in vacuum, and
  • α {\displaystyle \alpha }   is the fine-structure constant.

The CODATA value of the Bohr radius (in SI units) is 5.29177210903(80)×10−11 m.[1]

In the Bohr model for atomic structure, put forward by Niels Bohr in 1913, electrons orbit a central nucleus under electrostatic attraction. The original derivation posited that electrons have orbital angular momentum in integer multiples of the reduced Planck constant, which successfully matched the observation of discrete energy levels in emission spectra, along with predicting a fixed radius for each of these levels. In the simplest atom, hydrogen, a single electron orbits the nucleus, and its smallest possible orbit, with the lowest energy, has an orbital radius almost equal to the Bohr radius. (It is not exactly the Bohr radius due to the reduced mass effect. They differ by about 0.05%.)

The Bohr model of the atom was superseded by an electron probability cloud obeying the Schrödinger equation as published in 1926. This is further complicated by spin and quantum vacuum effects to produce fine structure and hyperfine structure. Nevertheless, the Bohr radius formula remains central in atomic physics calculations, due to its simple relationship with fundamental constants (this is why it is defined using the true electron mass rather than the reduced mass, as mentioned above). As such, it became the unit of length in atomic units.

In Schrödinger's quantum-mechanical theory of the hydrogen atom, the Bohr radius represents the most probable value of the radial coordinate of the electron position, and therefore the most probable distance of the electron from the nucleus.[4]

The Bohr radius is one of a trio of related units of length, the other two being the reduced Compton wavelength of the electron ( λ e / 2 π {\displaystyle \lambda _{\mathrm {e} }/2\pi }  ) and the classical electron radius ( r e {\displaystyle r_{\mathrm {e} }}  ). Any one of these constants can be written in terms of any of the others using the fine-structure constant α {\displaystyle \alpha }  :

r e = α λ e 2 π = α 2 a 0 . {\displaystyle r_{\mathrm {e} }=\alpha {\frac {\lambda _{\mathrm {e} }}{2\pi }}=\alpha ^{2}a_{0}.}  

The Bohr radius including the effect of reduced mass in the hydrogen atom is given by

  a 0 ∗   = m e μ a 0 , {\displaystyle \ a_{0}^{*}\ ={\frac {m_{\text{e}}}{\mu }}a_{0},}  

where μ = m e m p / ( m e + m p ) {\textstyle \mu =m_{\text{e}}m_{\text{p}}/(m_{\text{e}}+m_{\text{p}})}   is the reduced mass of the electron–proton system (with m p {\displaystyle m_{\text{p}}}   being the mass of proton). The use of reduced mass is a generalization of the classical two-body problem when we are outside the approximation that the mass of the orbiting body is negligible compared to the mass of the body being orbited. Since the reduced mass of the electron–proton system is a little bit smaller than the electron mass, the "reduced" Bohr radius is slightly larger than the Bohr radius ( a 0 ∗ ≈ 1.00054 a 0 ≈ 5.2946541 × 10 − 11 {\displaystyle a_{0}^{*}\approx 1.00054\,a_{0}\approx 5.2946541\times 10^{-11}}   meters).

This result can be generalized to other systems, such as positronium (an electron orbiting a positron) and muonium (an electron orbiting an anti-muon) by using the reduced mass of the system and considering the possible change in charge. Typically, Bohr model relations (radius, energy, etc.) can be easily modified for these exotic systems (up to lowest order) by simply replacing the electron mass with the reduced mass for the system (as well as adjusting the charge when appropriate). For example, the radius of positronium is approximately 2 a 0 {\displaystyle 2\,a_{0}}  , since the reduced mass of the positronium system is half the electron mass ( μ e − , e + = m e / 2 {\displaystyle \mu _{{\text{e}}^{-},{\text{e}}^{+}}=m_{\text{e}}/2}  ).

A hydrogen-like atom will have a Bohr radius which primarily scales as r Z = a 0 / Z {\displaystyle r_{Z}=a_{0}/Z}  , with Z {\displaystyle Z}   the number of protons in the nucleus. Meanwhile, the reduced mass ( μ {\displaystyle \mu }  ) only becomes better approximated by m e {\displaystyle m_{\text{e}}}   in the limit of increasing nuclear mass. These results are summarized in the equation

r Z , μ   = m e μ a 0 Z . {\displaystyle r_{Z,\mu }\ ={\frac {m_{\text{e}}}{\mu }}{\frac {a_{0}}{Z}}.}  

A table of approximate relationships is given below.

System Radius
Hydrogen 1.00054 a 0 {\displaystyle 1.00054\,a_{0}}  
Positronium 2 a 0 {\displaystyle 2a_{0}}  
Muonium 1.0048 a 0 {\displaystyle 1.0048\,a_{0}}  
He+ a 0 / 2 {\displaystyle a_{0}/2}  
Li2+ a 0 / 3 {\displaystyle a_{0}/3}  
  • Bohr magneton
  • Rydberg energy

  1. ^ a b "2018 CODATA Value: Bohr radius". The NIST Reference on Constants, Units, and Uncertainty. NIST. 20 May 2019. Retrieved 2019-05-20.
  2. ^ The number in parenthesis denotes the uncertainty of the last digits.
  3. ^ David J. Griffiths, Introduction to Quantum Mechanics, Prentice-Hall, 1995, p. 137. ISBN 0-13-124405-1
  4. ^ Nave, Rod. "The Most Probable Radius: Hydrogen Ground State". HyperPhysics. Dept. of Physics and Astronomy, Georgia State University. Retrieved 2 October 2021. The Schrodinger equation confirms the first Bohr radius as the most probable radius.

  • Length Scales in Physics: the Bohr Radius

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