Why is the ionization energy of the oxygen atom LESS than that of the nitrogen atom? Should not the greater atomic number of oxygen increase ionization energy?

2 Answers
Nov 7, 2017

This is arguably a consequence of "Hund's rule of maximum multiplicity."

Explanation:

And thus for the "2p orbitals".... we get for the 2p_x, 2p_y,

2p_z, orbitals of nitrogen, Z=7...

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.....rather than spin pairing.... which must occur for the ground state of the oxygen atom, Z=8, which accommodates the extra electron.....

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And thus the reaction...."Atom(g)"+Deltararr"Atom(g)"^(+) +e^- requires LESS energy for the oxygen ground state. This effect wins over atomic charge...

Nov 7, 2017

Because Nitrogen is more stable than Oxygen because of half-filled electronic configurations.

Explanation:

As we know that Hund's rule states half-filled and full-filled orbitals are more stable. The electronic configuration of Nitrogen and Oxygen are as below:

Nitrogen = 1s^2,2s^2 2p^3
Oxygen = 1s^2,2s^2 2p^4

Note: p-subshell orbital can carry 6 electrons.

When we look at the above electronic configuration of Nitrogen and Oxygen, the p-subshell orbital is half-filled for nitrogen whereas Oxygen has one extra electron than half-filled configuration. So, Nitrogen is more stable than Oxygen and it requires higher energies to ionizes. And also when oxygen is ionized, it goes to the stable electronic configuration (half-filled electronic configuration).