How much energy is required to move the electron of the hydrogen atom from the 1s to the 2s orbital
The energy needed to remove an electron from a negative ion to form a neutral atom or molecule is called the electron affinity. It represents the energy change when an electron is added to a neutral atom or molecule to form a negative ion. The higher the electron affinity, the greater the energy needed to remove an electron.
The "gas" needed for the electron transport chain is Hydrogen. In the electron transport chain its not Hydrogen gas H2 but a Hydrogen Ion H negative that flows across the membrane to produce engery.
For example when the electron absorb energy.
The amount of energy needed to remove the most loosely held electron is referred to as the ionization energy. It is the energy required to remove an electron from a gaseous atom or ion.
Briefly, it is the energy required to completely remove a valence (outer shell) electron from its atom when forming an ionic bond.See related links below for more info
bond energy
The energy required to move an electron in a hydrogen atom from the ground state (n=1) to a higher energy level (n=6) can be calculated using the formula for energy levels in hydrogen: ΔE = -13.6eV * (1/1^2 - 1/6^2), which equals to 10.2 eV. This means that 10.2 electronvolts of energy is needed to move the electron to the n=6 energy level.
Ionization energy is the minimum energy required to remove an electron from a ground state atom. According to the relationship developed by Neils Bohr, the total energy of an electron in a stable orbit of quantum number n is equal to En=-[Z2/n2].
The energy needed to remove an electron from a negative ion to form a neutral atom or molecule is called the electron affinity. It represents the energy change when an electron is added to a neutral atom or molecule to form a negative ion. The higher the electron affinity, the greater the energy needed to remove an electron.
The amount of energy needed to move an electron from one energy level to another is known as the energy difference between the two levels. This energy difference is typically quantified in electron volts (eV) or joules.
Each energy level corresponds to an exact amount of energy needed by the electron to orbit the nucleus. Transitions from a higher energy level to a lower energy level correspond to the difference in the energy needed for an electron to occupy those two energy levels. This difference creates the emission spectrum.
The energy needed to remove an electron from an atom (in the gaseous state) is called the IONIZATION ENERGY.
The "gas" needed for the electron transport chain is Hydrogen. In the electron transport chain its not Hydrogen gas H2 but a Hydrogen Ion H negative that flows across the membrane to produce engery.
Hydrogen because it has one electron in one energy level and is needed to make water (essential liquid).
For example when the electron absorb energy.
The energy required to remove an electron from a neutral atom is the atom's ionization energy. It represents the amount of energy needed to remove the most loosely bound electron from an atom in its gaseous state.
One atom is needed to full the outer shell of a hydrogen atom, this is bacuse in GCSE terms electrom structure goes 2,8,8,2 and hydrogen only has one shell, so it would need 2 to complete this shell. This is the same for A-level however we refer to electron structure in spd, the electron structure of hydrogen then would be 1s1.