Hydrogen is the chemical element with the symbol H and atomic number 1. With a standard atomic weight of 1.008, hydrogen is the lightest element in the periodic table. Hydrogen is the most abundant chemical substance in the universe, constituting roughly 75% of all baryonic mass. Non-remnant stars are mainly composed of hydrogen in the plasma state. The most common isotope of hydrogen, termed protium (name rarely used, symbol 1H), has one proton and no neutrons.
The universal emergence of atomic hydrogen first occurred during the recombination epoch (Big Bang). At standard temperature and pressure, hydrogen is a colorless, odorless, tasteless, non-toxic, nonmetallic, highly combustible diatomic gas with the molecular formula H2. Since hydrogen readily forms covalent compounds with most nonmetallic elements, most of the hydrogen on Earth exists in molecular forms such as water or organic compounds. Hydrogen plays a particularly important role in acid–base reactions because most acid-base reactions involve the exchange of protons between soluble molecules. In ionic compounds, hydrogen can take the form of a negative charge (i.e., anion) when it is known as a hydride, or as a positively charged (i.e., cation) species denoted by the symbol H+. The hydrogen cation is written as though composed of a bare proton, but in reality, hydrogen cations in ionic compounds are always more complex. As the only neutral atom for which the Schrödinger equation can be solved analytically, study of the energetics and bonding of the hydrogen atom has played a key role in the development of quantum mechanics.
Hydrogen gas was first artificially produced in the early 16th century by the reaction of acids on metals. In 1766–81, Henry Cavendish was the first to recognize that hydrogen gas was a discrete substance, and that it produces water when burned, the property for which it was later named: in Greek, hydrogen means "water-former".
Industrial production is mainly from steam reforming natural gas, and less often from more energy-intensive methods such as the electrolysis of water. Most hydrogen is used near the site of its production, the two largest uses being fossil fuel processing (e.g., hydrocracking) and ammonia production, mostly for the fertilizer market. Hydrogen is problematic in metallurgy because it can embrittle many metals, complicating the design of pipelines and storage tanks.
Homework Statement
An excited hydrogen atom can emit photons of various wavelengths.
a) What is the maximum wavelength of the Balmer series (in nm) (5pt)
b) What is the minimum wavelength of the Balmer series (in nm) (5pt)
c) Corresponding to part b), what is the kinetic energy of the recoil...
Homework Statement
Estimate the E-field required to ionize Hydrogen in a time comparable to the time taken for the electron to orbit the nucleus. (n=1 ground state) (hint: relate the required E field to the energy of a charged particle)
Homework Equations
F = mv^2/r (rotational)
F = Ze^2/Kr^2...
In the hydrogen molecule ion, one electron is responsible for the covalent bond between the atoms. But is it possible for one single elctron to create two bonds or more? What happens if we solve the Shrödinger equation for 3 protons and 1 electron?
The accepted explanation for the existence of water as a liquid involves hydrogen bonding. Why is this phenomenon absent in the case of hydrogen sulphide?
I have some confusions, and I would like some help:
What states will hydrogen atom be before it emits a photon?
Will it possible be superposition of its eigenstates? (If so, then by measuring the energy of photon, we measure its' energy causing its wavefunction collapse, am I right?)...
Homework Statement
Suppose we have a wavefunction with n=4. If we measure the orbital angular momentum along the z-direction(no spin in this problem) and get 2*hbar then what are the possible values of the total angular momentum and what is the most general wavefunction after the measurement...
Hello internet!
Please excuse any silly questions as I am not (obviously) a professionally educated physicist (yet!).
I was doing a school project on alternative energy sources and became rather interested in hydrogen fuel cells, specifically to replace batteries in small scale, high energy...
I've been looking into compressed Hydrogen storage, and it seems that the high pressure containers have a lot of layers on the inside to keep the Hydrogen from leaking out/diffusing over the lifetime. However now I'm curious as to whether you could use a tank to store high-pressure Hydrogen (in...
As the title says, why does the set of hydrogen bound states form an orthonormal basis? This is clearly not true in general since some potentials (such as the finite square well and reversed gaussian) only admit a finite number of bound states.
Homework Statement
On which orbit of hydrogen atom an electron has the speed of 734 km/s?
Homework Equations
Bohr's second postulate: mvr=nh,m=9.109\cdot 10^{-31}kg,v=734 km/s,h=6.626\cdot 10^{-34} m^{2}kg/s
The Attempt at a Solution
By using the second Bohr's postulate, we get 6686.006\cdot...
What is the most practical and cost efficient way to make a 10m3 gas bag for the storage of hydrogen?
I am thinking of storing H2 from water electrolysis in an outdoor area, a bit like the way biodigestor gas is stored in low cost, small scale installations.
My concern is the high effusing...
Electrochemical hydrogen compressors (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrochemical_hydrogen_compressor) basically convert an electrical potential difference into a pressure difference. Would it be possible to run one of these in reverse, i.e. using a pressure difference to create a voltage? If...
Hi PhysicsForums,
I'm asking this as part of a small research project of mine in exploring hydrogen as an alternative energy source to fossil fuels.
Based on my limited understanding, hydrogen is a good alternative to fossil fuels (especially in cars) because the only waste product is water...
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known
Mg metal reacts with HCl to produce hydrogen gas. What is the minimum volume of HCl solution (27% by weight) required to produce 12.1 g of H2? Density of HCl solution is 1.14 g/cm3Homework Equations
[/B]
This question...
I'd like to see some 3D visualizations of what the wave functions of the electron and proton in a hydrogen atom would look like in different applied electric fields. Say, have a reference image at 0V, then images at various voltages where the wave functions look interesting or just illustrative...
This website here says that the expression for binding energy for an electron is:
This http://ocw.mit.edu/high-school/chemistry/exam-prep/structure-of-matter/atomic-theory-and-atomic-structure/MITHFH_lecnotes05.pdfby MIT calculates it quantum mechanically to give:
The book I was reading...
Homework Statement
Homework EquationsThe Attempt at a Solution
From the calculation of the potential of the cell and the potential for the copper electrode, it states that the hydrogen electrode has a potential of -0.09 V. But I thought hydrogen electrode is standard so it should be zero...
Hello, I was curious about how to calculate how fast the escape velocity of hydrogen out of a tube/cylinder would be. Once end of the cylinder is closed, the other is open, obviously.
Assume the cylinder is full of hydrogen at 1 atm. My thought is that you could use PV=NRT to calculate the...
Homework Statement
We model the Hydrogen atom as a charge distribution in which the proton (a point charge) is surrounded by negative charge with the volume density of ρ = -ρ0 * exp (-2r/a0) where a0 is the Bohr radius. And ρ0 is a constant chosen such that the entire atomic distribution is...
Is Hydrogen a practical way to store energy and create fresh water?
Consider this scenario:
There is an island lacking a fresh water source. So you build some off-shore wind turbines. The electricity doesn't go far - just into the salt water at the turbine's base, where it uses Electrolysis...
Hello, I'm curious to find how much work is released by hydrogen explosion. My method is by making a projectile launched vertically by hydrogen's explosion. Take the highest peak that the projectile launched, multiply it by the projectile's mass and gravity which should yield the maximum...
Homework Statement
Hi!
I have a a question regarding the Atomic Spectra of Hydrogen and Mercury. My problem involves the value of m and Rydberg's constant. I used a spectrometer for this lab and calculated all the necessary angles.
Homework Equations
See below
The Attempt at a Solution...
Homework Statement
Hydrogen peroxide breaks down easily to give water and oxygen as follows:
2H2O2(aq)----> 2H2O2(l) + O2(g)
Bottles of hydrogen peroxide are sometimes labelled as 10 volume as well as 3%. This means the volume of oxygen that can be liberated is 10 times the volume of the...
Homework Statement
Assume that there is a deviation from Coulomb’s law at very small distances, the Coulomb potential energy between an electron and proton is given by
V_{mod}(r)=\begin{cases}
-\frac{q^{2}}{4\pi\varepsilon_{0}}\frac{b}{r^{2}} & 0<r\leq b\\...
Homework Statement
Determine if the electron transitions are "allowed" or "forbidden" using the transition rules:
i. 2p→2s
ii. 1s→2p
iii. 3d→2p
iv. 3d→1s
v. 4s→2p
Homework Equations
Δl = ±1, Δml= 0, ±1
E = (-2.18*10-18eV)(1/n12 - 1/n22)
The Attempt at a Solution
I know iv. is forbidden...
I am trying to calculate the Lyman-alpha wavelengths of photons emitted from different hydrogen-like atoms such as deuterium and positive helium ion 4He+, using the relation 1/λ = R*|1/ni^2 - 1/nf^2|, where R is the Rydberg constant and ni and nf are integer numbers corresponding to the initial...
Hello, in ice I have read that the average bond length of the hydrogen bond is about 2 Angstroms. This is roughly twice the O-H (covalent) bond length. My question is what really determines the length of the hydrogen bond? Why wouldn't the hydrogen be drawn closer to the next water...
Homework Statement
The equation for the normalized ##n=3##, ##l=2##, ##m=0## wavefunction is given by $$\psi_{320}=\frac{1}{81\sqrt{6\pi}}\left(\frac{1}{a_0}\right)^{3/2}\left(\frac{1}{a_0^2}\right)r^2e^{-\frac{r}{3a_0}}(3cos^2\theta-1)e^{i\phi}$$
Determine the expectation value ##<r>##...
Just wondering why to use negative hydrogen H- ion in spallation neutron source.
I read the literature through http://neutrons2.ornl.gov/facilities/SNS/works.shtml , still not yet get the answer.
If directly use proton, then still easy to accelerate, and no need to strip off the unwanted...
If we were to assume that the electron moves around the proton with radius a, the Schrodinger equation becomes:
##\frac{1}{a^2}\frac{d^2\psi}{d\phi^2} + \frac{2m}{\hbar^2}|E|\psi = 0##
The question in my textbook asks me to solve the above equation to obtain values of energy and angular...
Dear all,
So I have a question concerning atomic conservation in an ionized hydrogen gas. So imagine we have ## H_2 ## initially. Later the gas is taken to an appreciable temperature such that at equilibrium the following species are present, ## e^-, \ H, \ H^+, \ H_2, \ H^-, \ \text{and} \...
The problem:
A beam of electrons with kinetic energy 12.8 eV collides with a hydrogen target. What visible spectral lines will be emitted due to collisions?
My question:
I am confident I know how to do the bulk of this question, I am just uncertain about one thing: I know that 12.8 eV is enough...
I would like to start experimenting with hydrogen as an electricity source, but I haven't been able to find any good resources for steps after the hydrogen generation. I've made some prototypes of small-scale hydrogen generation using electrolysis, so now I basically have two bags, one filled...
Homework Statement
Using a radio telescope we are recording data from the galactic plane at the 1420.4MHz frequency of neutral Hydrogen - we are aiming to create a polar map of the Hydrogen in the Milky Way. When looking through a cloud of Hydrogen (i.e. a spiral arm) the frequency observed can...
I was studying for (first year) physics class and was playing around with the Bohr Model of Hydrogen. I tried calculating the electric potential at the Bohr radius r =5.29e-11 m, where V = \frac{e}{4 \pi \epsilon_0 r} (from the point-charge formula for electric potential) and I got 27.19 J/C...
Photodissociation of hydrogen at ground state requires a 273nm wavelength for a photon particle to dissociate H2--> H- + H+. But what about hydrogen at higher states of energy? Is the 273nm a constant? If not, what is the formula for min. wavelength for higher energy states...
I just read Paul Davies book The Eerie Silence. In The Eerie Silence, Paul Davies asserts that the radio astronomers looking for radio signals from extraterrestrial civilizations search for radio signals at the frequency 1420 MHz because that is the emission frequency for cold hydrogen gas...
Homework Statement
Homework Equations
N/a
The Attempt at a Solution
Hi all,
For part a) I simply discussed the fact that the contributions to the fine structure arise from the Darwin term, relativistic corrections to the kinetic energy, and the spin-orbital coupling with a bit of detail...
Hello, I am by far not very firmiliar with physics nor engineering. I had an idea a couple years ago involving the replacement of the propane in hot air balloons with hydrogen gas as the fuel to burned to provide the heat to lift the balloon. One thing I didn't realize back then was that...
What do you think about Feynman's description (http://feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/III_12.html#Ch12-S3) ? It seems to be inconsistent with hyperphysics (http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/quantum/h21.html).
Good day
With reference to the following article: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00506468
The measured frequency is given as 2922742936.729(13)MHz but right at the end of the article, the following is written:
"The hyperfine structure of the 1S level is well known and that of the 3S...
I am trying to understand selection rules in atomic transitions.
So, one of the selection rules says that only transitions where orbital quantum number is changed by 1 are possible. If that is the case how can hydrogen in ground state get to 2s state? Can we detect spectroscopic line that...
So I'm curious, if you mix two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen in a bottle, how do they mix? I know that it wouldn't turn into water unless lit on fire. If the bottle was turned upside down and uncapped, would the oxygen fall out the bottom and hydrogen float to the top? Or are the two...
Suppose a single hydrogen atom is in mixed state.
Ψ=(1/√2) Ψ_100+(1/√2) Ψ_200
Then energy will be E=(1/2)*13.6+(1/2)*(3.4)=8.5 eV.
But there is no spectral line at 8.5 eV.
Dear PF Forum,
First of all, Happy New Year 2016, may your hopes, dreams, wishes and plans be fullfiled in this year.
I'm interested in AntiOxidant.
I've read:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antioxidant
and
http://www.1stvitality.co.uk/az/antioxidants/antioxidants.htm
Those sites give me this...
Most books discribe NMR as a diagnotic technique for Hydrogen and its isotopes. Could Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy be applied for other elements with odd atomic number besides H? If so, what is the major challenge for a multi-element scanning?
Hello people ! Hope you are fine!
I tried to find the inner product that u can see below, between two different radial functions.
I was expecting to find zero but i found something nonzero.
You can see my two questions below in the photo.