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Topic: Electron Affinity  (Read 1286 times)

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Offline Resasb

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Electron Affinity
« on: June 14, 2016, 09:48:18 PM »
Why does an atom have a high electron affinity when its charge is neutral? Let's use H as an example... I understand that gaining an electron will complete its shell, but wouldn't its tendency to remain neutral (inertia) override it's affinity for the extra electron? Where am I lost?

Offline Enthalpy

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Re: Electron Affinity
« Reply #1 on: June 15, 2016, 05:07:53 AM »
The neutral atom doesn't attract nor repel an additional electron when it's far.

When the second electron is near the proton, it gets attracted too, while the electrons repel an other. The trick is that the electrons arrange among themselves and, as a mean, are farther apart than their distance to the proton.

Note 1: the ability of electrons to arrange themselves holds for more electrons in a bigger atom.

Note 2: the orbitals are "stationary", that is, immobile, static, and so on. So it's "if" one electron is here and the other is there, not "when" as many sources write. ψ(r1, r2, t) has a magnitude independent of t but differs from any attempted ψ(r1, t)×ψ(r2, t) to reflect this.

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