no because f orbitals are not energetically available until the n=4 quantum state
3f can not exist by the Aufbau principle, quantum mechanics and Hunds rules. In level one there is only 1s In level 2 there is 2s and 2p In level 3 there is 3s, 3p and 3d Only in level 4 and beyond is there an f shell. In level 4 there is 4s, 4p, 4d and 4f. The 4f can hold up to 14 electrons.
The Angular Momentum Quantum number L, defines how many types of orbitals can exist. For a particular Quantum Level n, L is defined as any integer from 0 to L = n-1. For example, for the energy level n = we must have, L = 0 or 1. L=0 relates to the s-orbital L=1 relates to the p-orbital L=2 would relate to the d-orbital, but we can see here that for n=2, L cannot = 2
The s orbital is present in all valid principal quantum number shells.The p orbital is present in n = 2 and higher.The d orbital is present in n = 3 and higher.The f orbital is present in n = 4 and higher.So the invalid ones are b (there are no 2d orbitals) and c (there are no 3f orbitals). 4s and 3p are perfectly legitimate.
In the context of atomic orbitals, the 2d orbital does not exist. The electron orbitals in an atom are defined by three quantum numbers: principal quantum number (n), angular momentum quantum number (l), and magnetic quantum number (m). The angular momentum quantum number (l) can take values of 0 to (n-1), meaning the d orbitals start at l=2, corresponding to the 3d orbitals.
In an atom, an orbital is a region where electrons are likely to be found, while a shell is a group of orbitals with similar energy levels. Orbitals are specific locations within a shell where electrons can exist.
3f
There can be a maximum of 14 electrons in any "f" orbital. However, the 3f orbital does not exist. f orbitals are only found in quantum energy level 4 and above.
no
The orbital designations 3f and 2d are invalid. The letter "f" is not used to designate orbitals, and the numbers in the designation should follow a specific order: 1s, 2s, 2p, 3s, 3p, 4s, 3d, 4p, 5s, etc.
3f can not exist by the Aufbau principle, quantum mechanics and Hunds rules. In level one there is only 1s In level 2 there is 2s and 2p In level 3 there is 3s, 3p and 3d Only in level 4 and beyond is there an f shell. In level 4 there is 4s, 4p, 4d and 4f. The 4f can hold up to 14 electrons.
3f
The Angular Momentum Quantum number L, defines how many types of orbitals can exist. For a particular Quantum Level n, L is defined as any integer from 0 to L = n-1. For example, for the energy level n = we must have, L = 0 or 1. L=0 relates to the s-orbital L=1 relates to the p-orbital L=2 would relate to the d-orbital, but we can see here that for n=2, L cannot = 2
The s orbital is present in all valid principal quantum number shells.The p orbital is present in n = 2 and higher.The d orbital is present in n = 3 and higher.The f orbital is present in n = 4 and higher.So the invalid ones are b (there are no 2d orbitals) and c (there are no 3f orbitals). 4s and 3p are perfectly legitimate.
The incorrect atomic orbital designation from the list provided is 7f. The correct designations are 6p, 2d, and 3f. The main energy levels for orbitals typically range from 1 to 7, and the "f" orbitals are found starting from the 4th principal energy level.
The orbital 1p2s2p is not possible because the electron configuration notation generally does not include numbers in the orbital names. The notation should typically follow the format: principal energy level (n) followed by the subshell letter (s, p, d, f) and the number of electrons in that subshell. The orbital 3f is not possible in the electron configuration scheme for elements up to and including the actinide series. The "f" orbitals appear in the lanthanide and actinide series, but for elements in the main periodic table, the "f" orbitals are not included.
Molecular orbitals: dihelium has two electrons in the bonding orbital and two in the antibonding orbital. That why it does not exists.
-3f - 14 = 1 -3f = 1+14 -3f = 15 f = -5