Four quantum numbers can describe an electron energy level in a
hydrogen-like atom completely: •
Principal quantum number () •
Azimuthal quantum number () •
Magnetic quantum number () •
Spin quantum number () These quantum numbers are also used in the classical description of nuclear particle states (e.g. protons and neutrons). A quantum description of
molecular orbitals requires other quantum numbers, because the symmetries of the molecular system are different.
Principal quantum number The principal quantum number describes the
electron shell of an atom. The value of ranges from 1 to the shell containing the outermost electron of that atom, that is n = 1, 2, \ldots For example, in
caesium (Cs), the outermost
valence electron is in the shell with energy level 6, so an electron in caesium can have an value from 1 to 6. The average distance between the electron and the nucleus increases with .
Azimuthal quantum number The azimuthal quantum number, also known as the
orbital angular momentum quantum number, describes the
subshell, and gives the magnitude of the orbital
angular momentum through the relation L^2 = \hbar^2 \ell(\ell + 1). In chemistry and spectroscopy, is called s orbital, , p orbital, , d orbital, and , f orbital. The value of ranges from 0 to , so the first p orbital () appears in the second electron shell (), the first d orbital () appears in the third shell (), and so on: \ell = 0, 1, 2, \ldots, n-1 A quantum number beginning in , , describes an electron in the s orbital of the third electron shell of an atom. In chemistry, this quantum number is very important, since it specifies the shape of an
atomic orbital and strongly influences
chemical bonds and
bond angles. The azimuthal quantum number can also denote the number of angular nodes present in an orbital. For example, for p orbitals, and thus the amount of angular nodes in a p orbital is 1.
Magnetic quantum number The
magnetic quantum number describes the specific
orbital within the subshell, and yields the
projection of the orbital
angular momentum along a specified axis: L_z = m_\ell \hbar The values of range from to , with integer intervals. The s subshell () contains only one orbital, and therefore the of an electron in an s orbital will always be 0. The p subshell () contains three orbitals, so the of an electron in a p orbital will be −1, 0, or 1. The d subshell () contains five orbitals, with values of −2, −1, 0, 1, and 2.
Spin magnetic quantum number The
spin magnetic quantum number describes the intrinsic
spin angular momentum of the electron within each orbital and gives the projection of the spin angular momentum along the specified axis: S_z = m_s \hbar In general, the values of range from to , where is the spin quantum number, associated with the magnitude of particle's intrinsic spin angular momentum: m_s = -s, -s+1, -s+2, \cdots, s-2, s-1, s An electron state has spin number , consequently will be + ("spin up") or − "spin down" states. Since electron are
fermions, they obey the
Pauli exclusion principle: each electron state must have different quantum numbers. Therefore, every orbital will be occupied with at most two electrons, one for each spin state.
Aufbau principle and Hund's rules A multi-electron atom can be modeled qualitatively as a hydrogen like atom with higher nuclear charge and correspondingly more electrons. The occupation of the electron states in such an atom can be predicted by the Aufbau principle and Hund's empirical rules for the quantum numbers. The Aufbau principle fills orbitals based on their principal and azimuthal quantum numbers (lowest first, with lowest breaking ties; Hund's rule favors unpaired electrons in the outermost orbital). These rules are empirical but they can be related to electron physics. == Spin–orbit coupled systems ==