Generally, the (
N+1)th ionization energy of a particular element is larger than the
Nth ionization energy (it may also be noted that the ionization energy of an anion is generally less than that of cations and neutral atom for the same element). When the next ionization energy involves removing an electron from the same electron shell, the increase in ionization energy is primarily due to the increased net charge of the ion from which the electron is being removed. Electrons removed from more highly charged ions experience greater forces of electrostatic attraction; thus, their removal requires more energy. In addition, when the next ionization energy involves removing an electron from a lower electron shell, the greatly decreased distance between the nucleus and the electron also increases both the electrostatic force and the distance over which that force must be overcome to remove the electron. Both of these factors further increase the ionization energy. Some values for elements of the third period are given in the following table: Large jumps in the successive molar ionization energies occur when passing noble gas configurations. For example, as can be seen in the table above, the first two molar ionization energies of magnesium (stripping the two 3s electrons from a magnesium atom) are much smaller than the third, which requires stripping off a 2p electron from the
neon configuration of Mg2+. That 2p electron is much closer to the nucleus than the 3s electrons removed previously. Ionization energy is also a
periodic trend within the periodic table. Moving left to right within a
period, or upward within a
group, the first ionization energy generally increases, with exceptions such as aluminium and sulfur in the table above. As the nuclear charge of the nucleus increases across the period, the electrostatic attraction increases between electrons and protons, hence the
atomic radius decreases, and the electron cloud comes closer to the nucleus because the electrons, especially the outermost one, are held more tightly by the higher effective nuclear charge. On moving downward within a given group, the electrons are held in higher-energy shells with higher principal quantum number n, further from the nucleus and therefore are more loosely bound so that the ionization energy decreases. The
effective nuclear charge increases only slowly so that its effect is outweighed by the increase in n.
Exceptions in ionization energies There are exceptions to the general trend of rising ionization energies within a period. For example, the value decreases from
beryllium (: 9.3 eV) to
boron (: 8.3 eV), and from
nitrogen (: 14.5 eV) to
oxygen (: 13.6 eV). These dips can be explained in terms of electron configurations. . Boron has its last electron in a 2p orbital, which has its
electron density further away from the nucleus on average than the 2s electrons in the same shell. The 2s electrons then shield the 2p electron from the nucleus to some extent, and it is easier to remove the 2p electron from boron than to remove a 2s electron from beryllium, resulting in a lower ionization energy for B. Furthermore, after every noble gas element, the ionization energy drastically drops. This occurs because the outer electron in the
alkali metals requires a much lower amount of energy to be removed from the atom than the inner shells. This also gives rise to low
electronegativity values for the alkali metals. The trends and exceptions are summarized in the following subsections:
Ionization energy decreases when • Transitioning to a new period: an alkali metal easily loses one electron to leave an
octet or pseudo-
noble gas configuration, so those elements have only small values for IE. • Moving from the s-block to the p-block: a p-orbital loses an electron more easily. An example is beryllium to boron, with electron configuration 1s2 2s2 2p1. The 2s electrons shield the higher-energy 2p electron from the nucleus, making it slightly easier to remove. This also happens from
magnesium to
aluminium. • Occupying a p-subshell with its
first electron with spin opposed to the other electrons: such as in nitrogen (: 14.5 eV) to oxygen (: 13.6 eV), as well as
phosphorus (: 10.48 eV) to
sulfur (: 10.36 eV). The reason for this is because oxygen, sulfur and selenium all have dipping ionization energies because of shielding effects. However, this discontinues starting from
tellurium where the shielding is too small to produce a dip. • Moving from the d-block to the p-block: as in the case of
zinc (: 9.4 eV) to
gallium (: 6.0 eV) • Special case: decrease from
lead (: 7.42 eV) to
bismuth (: 7.29 eV). This cannot be attributed to size (the difference is minimal: lead has a covalent radius of 146
pm whereas
bismuth's is 148 pm). This is due to the spin-orbit splitting of the 6p shell (lead is removing an electron from the stabilised 6p1/2 level, but bismuth is removing one from the destabilised 6p3/2 level). Predicted ionization energies show a much greater decrease from
flerovium to
moscovium, one row further down the periodic table and with much larger spin-orbit effects. • Special case: decrease from radium (: 5.27 eV) to
actinium (: 5.17 eV), which is a switch from an s to a d orbital. However the analogous switch from
barium (: 5.2 eV) to
lanthanum (: 5.6 eV) does not show a downward change. •
Lutetium () and
lawrencium () both have ionization energies lower than the previous elements. In both cases the last electron added
starts a new subshell: 5d for Lu with electron configuration [Xe] 4f14 5d1 6s2, and 7p for Lr with configuration [Rn] 5f4 7s2 7p1. These dips in ionization energies for lutetium and especially lawrencium show that these elements belong in the d-block, and not lanthanum and actinium.
Ionization energy increases when • Reaching Group 18
noble gas elements: This is due to their complete electron subshells, so that these elements require large amounts of energy to remove one electron. • Group 12: The elements here, zinc (: 9.4 eV),
cadmium (: 9.0 eV) and
mercury (: 10.4 eV) all record sudden rising IE values in contrast to their preceding elements:
copper (: 7.7 eV),
silver (: 7.6 eV) and
gold (: 9.2 eV), respectively. For mercury, it can be extrapolated that the
relativistic stabilization of the 6s electrons increases the ionization energy, in addition to poor shielding by 4f electrons that increases the effective nuclear charge on the outer valence electrons. In addition, the closed-subshells electron configurations: [Ar] 3d10 4s2, [Kr] 4d105s2 and [Xe] 4f14 5d10 6s2 provide increased stability. • Special case: shift from
rhodium (: 7.5 eV) to
palladium (: 8.3 eV). Unlike other Group 10 elements, palladium has a higher ionization energy than the preceding atom, due to its electron configuration. In contrast to
nickel's [Ar] 3d8 4s2, and
platinum's [Xe] 4f14 5d9 6s1, palladium's electron configuration is [Kr] 4d10 5s0 (even though the
Madelung rule predicts [Kr] 4d8 5s2). Finally,
silver's lower IE (: 7.6 eV) further accentuates the high value for palladium; the single added s electron is removed with a lower ionization energy than palladium, which emphasizes palladium's high IE (as shown in the above linear table values for IE) • The IE of
gadolinium (: 6.15 eV) is somewhat higher than both the preceding (: 5.64 eV), (: 5.67 eV) and following elements (: 5.86 eV), (: 5.94 eV). This anomaly is due to the fact that gadolinium valence d-subshell borrows 1 electron from the valence f-subshell. Now the valence subshell is the d-subshell, and due to the poor shielding of positive nuclear charge by electrons of the f-subshell, the electron of the valence d-subshell experiences a greater attraction to the nucleus, therefore increasing the energy required to remove the (outermost) valence electron. • Moving into d-block elements: The elements Sc with a 3d1 electronic configuration has a
higher IP (: 6.56 eV) than the preceding element (: 6.11 eV), contrary to the decreases on moving into s-block and p-block elements. The 4s and 3d electrons have similar shielding ability: the 3d orbital forms part of the n=3 shell whose average position is closer to the nucleus than the 4s orbital and the n=4 shell, but electrons in s orbitals experience greater penetration into the nucleus than electrons in d orbitals. So the mutual shielding of 3d and 4s electrons is weak, and the effective nuclear charge acting on the ionized electron is relatively large. Yttrium () similarly has a higher IP (6.22 eV) than : 5.69 eV. • Moving into f-block elements; The elements (: 5.18 eV) and (: 5.17 eV) have only very slightly lower IP's than their preceding elements (: 5.21 eV) and (: 5.18 eV), though their atoms are anomalies in that they add a d-electron rather than an f-electron. As can be seen in the above graph for ionization energies, the sharp rise in IE values from (: 3.89 eV) to (: 5.21 eV) is followed by a small increase (with some fluctuations) as the f-block proceeds from to . This is due to the
lanthanide contraction (for lanthanides). This decrease in ionic radius is associated with an increase in ionization energy in turn increases, since the two properties correlate to each other. Nonetheless, this is not always the case. As one exception, in Group 10 palladium (: 8.34 eV) has a higher ionization energy than nickel (: 7.64 eV), contrary to the general decrease for the elements from technetium to xenon . Such anomalies are summarized below: • Group 1: •
Hydrogen's ionization energy is very high (at 13.59844 eV), compared to the alkali metals. This is due to its single electron (and hence, very small
electron cloud), which is close to the nucleus. Likewise, since there are not any other electrons that may cause shielding, that single electron experiences the full net positive charge of the nucleus. •
Francium's ionization energy is higher than the precedent
alkali metal,
cesium. This is due to its (and radium's) small ionic radii owing to relativistic effects. Because of their large mass and size, this means that its electrons are traveling at extremely high speeds, which results in the electrons coming closer to the nucleus than expected, and they are consequently harder to remove (higher IE). • Group 2:
Radium's ionization energy is higher than its antecedent
alkaline earth metal barium, like francium, which is also due to relativistic effects. The electrons, especially the 1s electrons, experience
very high effective nuclear charges. To avoid falling into the nucleus, the 1s electrons must move at very high speeds, which causes the special relativistic corrections to be substantially higher than the approximate classical momenta. By the
uncertainty principle, this causes a relativistic contraction of the 1s orbital (and other orbitals with electron density close to the nucleus, especially ns and np orbitals). Hence this causes a cascade of electron changes, which finally results in the outermost electron shells contracting and getting closer to the nucleus. • Group 4: •
Hafnium's near similarity in IE with
zirconium. The effects of the lanthanide contraction can still be felt
after the lanthanides. (
empirical value), which differs from the latter's 155 pm. This in turn makes its ionization energies increase by 18 kJ/mol−1. •
Titanium's IE is smaller than that of both hafnium and zirconium. Hafnium's ionization energy is similar to zirconium's due to lanthanide contraction. However, why zirconium's ionization energy is higher than the preceding elements' remains unclear; we cannot attribute it to atomic radius as it is higher for zirconium and hafnium by 15 pm. We also cannot invoke the
condensed ionization energy, as it is more or less the same ([Ar] 3d2 4s2 for titanium, whereas [Kr] 4d2 5s2 for zirconium). Additionally, there are no half-filled nor fully filled orbitals we might compare. Hence, we can only invoke zirconium's
full electron configuration, which is 1s22s22p63s23p6
3d104s24p64d25s2. The presence of a full 3d-block sublevel is tantamount to a higher shielding efficiency compared to the 4d-block elements (which are only two electrons). • Group 5: akin to Group 4,
niobium and
tantalum are analogous to each other, due to their electron configuration and to the lanthanide contraction affecting the latter element. Ipso facto, their significant rise in IE compared to the foremost element in the group,
vanadium, can be attributed due to their full d-block electrons, in addition to their electron configuration. Another intriguing notion is niobium's half-filled 5s orbital; due to repulsion and exchange energy (in other words the
"costs" of putting an electron in a low-energy sublevel to completely fill it instead of putting the electron in a high-energy one) overcoming the energy gap between s- and d-(or f) block electrons, the EC does not follow the Madelung rule. • Group 6: like its forerunners groups 4 and 5, group 6 also record high values when moving downward.
Tungsten is once again similar to
molybdenum due to their electron configurations. Likewise, it is also attributed to the full 3d-orbital in its electron configuration. Another reason is molybdenum's half filled 4d orbital due to electron pair energies violating the aufbau principle. • Groups 7-12 6th period elements (
rhenium,
osmium,
iridium,
platinum,
gold and
mercury): All of these elements have extremely high ionization energies compared to the elements preceding them in their respective groups. The essence of this is due to the lanthanide contraction's influence on post lanthanides, in addition to the relativistic stabilization of the 6s orbital. • Group 13: • Gallium's IE is higher than aluminum's. This is once again due to d-orbitals, in addition to scandide contraction, providing weak shielding, and hence the effective nuclear charges are augmented. • Thallium's IE, due to poor shielding of 4f electrons in addition to lanthanide contraction, causes its IE to be increased in contrast to its precursor
indium. • Group 14:
Lead's unusually high ionization energy (: 7.42 eV) is, akin to that of group 13's thallium, a result of the full 5d and 4f subshells. The lanthanide contraction and the inefficient screening of the nucleus by the 4f electrons results in slightly
higher ionization energy for lead than for
tin (: 7.34 eV). == Bohr model for hydrogen atom ==