Factors Affecting Ionization Potential

Factors Affecting Ionization Potential


The magnitude of Ionization potential depends upon:


1. Charge in the nucleus


The greater the charge on the nucleus, the more difficult it will be to remove an outermost electron from that atom. Thus, greater the nuclear charge of an atom, greater will be its ionization potential. Halogens have highest ionization potential in their respective periods.


2. Atomic radius


With the increase in the atomic radius, the ionization potential decreases. This is because of the fact that in case of larger atoms the attraction between the nucleus and the outer most electron is less and hence it is easier to remove an electron from a larger atom than from a smaller one.

This can be seen from the fact that as we move down a group, the size increases, while ionization potential decreases.







3. Completely and partially filled in shells

The atoms having a completely filled or partially filled outer most shell are comparatively more stable than the atoms with incompletely filled outer shells. This, the ionization potential of such atoms are relatively higher than expected normally from their positions in the periodic table.



You can then have as many successive ionisation energies as there are electrons in the original atom.
The first four ionisation energies of aluminium, for example, are given by

1st I.E. = 577 kJ mol-1
2nd I.E. = 1820 kJ mol-1
3rd I.E. = 2740 kJ mol-1
4th I.E. = 11600 kJ mol-1
In order to form an Al3+(g) ion from Al(g) you would have to supply:
577 + 1820 + 2740 = 5137 kJ mol-1
That's a lot of energy. Why, then, does aluminium form Al3+ ions?
It can only form them if it can get that energy back from somewhere, and whether that's feasible depends on what it is reacting with.
For example, if aluminium reacts with fluorine or oxygen, it can recover that energy in various changes involving the fluorine or oxygen - and so aluminium fluoride or aluminium oxide contain Al3+ ions.
If it reacts with chlorine, it can't recover sufficient energy, and so solid anhydrous aluminium chloride isn't actually ionic - instead, it forms covalent bonds.

Why doesn't aluminium form an Al4+ ion? The fourth ionisation energy is huge compared with the first three, and there is nothing that aluminium can react with which would enable it to recover that amount of extra energy.
Why do successive ionisation energies get larger?
Once you have removed the first electron you are left with a positive ion. Trying to remove a negative electron from a positive ion is going to be more difficult than removing it from an atom. Removing an electron from a 2+ or 3+ (etc) ion is going to be progressively more difficult.
Why is the fourth ionisation energy of aluminium so large?
The electronic structure of aluminium is 1s22s22p63s23px1. The first three electrons to be removed are the three electrons in the 3p and 3s orbitals. Once they've gone, the fourth electron is removed from the 2p level - much closer to the nucleus, and only screened by the 1s2 (and to some extent the 2s2) electrons.
Using ionisation energies to work out which group an element is in
This big jump between two successive ionisation energies is typical of suddenly breaking in to an inner level. You can use this to work out which group of the Periodic Table an element is in from its successive ionisation energies.
Magnesium (1s22s22p63s2) is in group 2 of the Periodic Table and has successive ionisation energies:

Here the big jump occurs after the second ionisation energy. It means that there are 2 electrons which are relatively easy to remove (the 3s2 electrons), while the third one is much more difficult (because it comes from an inner level - closer to the nucleus and with less screening).
Silicon (1s22s22p63s23px13py1) is in group 4 of the Periodic Table and has successive ionisation energies:

Here the big jump comes after the fourth electron has been removed. The first 4 electrons are coming from the 3-level orbitals; the fifth from the 2-level.
The lesson from all this:
Count the easy electrons - those up to (but not including) the big jump. That is the same as the group number.
Another example:
Decide which group an atom is in if it has successive ionisation energies:
The ionisation energies are going up one or two thousand at a time for the first five. Then there is a huge jump of about 15000. There are 5 relatively easy electrons - so the element is in group 5.
Exploring the patterns in more detail
If you plot graphs of successive ionisation energies for a particular element, you can see the fluctuations in it caused by the different electrons being removed.
Not only can you see the big jumps in ionisation energy when an electron comes from an inner level, but you can also see the minor fluctuations within a level depending on whether the electron is coming from an s or a p orbital, and even whether it is paired or unpaired in that orbital.
Chlorine has the electronic structure 1s22s22p63s23px23py23pz1.
This graph plots the first eight ionisation energies of chlorine. The green labels show which electron is being removed for each of the ionisation energies.
If you put a ruler on the first and second points to establish the trend, you'll find that the third, fourth and fifth points lie above the value you would expect. That is because the first two electrons are coming from pairs in the 3p levels and are therefore rather easier to remove than if they were unpaired.
Again, if you put a ruler on the 3rd, 4th and 5th points to establish their trend, you'll find that the 6th and 7th points lie well above the values you would expect from a continuation of the trend. That is because the 6th and 7th electrons are coming from the 3s level - slightly closer to the nucleus and slightly less well screened.
The massive jump as you break into the inner level at the 8th electron is fairly obvious!



Warning!  People sometimes get confused with these graphs because they forget that they are removing electrons from the atom. For example, the first point refers to the first electron being lost - from a 3p orbital. Basically, you start from the outside of the atom and work in towards the middle. If you start from the 1s orbital and work outwards, you are doomed to failure!



To plot any more ionisation energies for chlorine needs a change of vertical scale. The seventeenth ionisation energy of chlorine is nearly 400,000 kJ mol-1, and the vertical scale has to be squashed to accommodate this.

This is now a "log graph" - plotted by finding the logarithm of each ionisation energy (press the "log" button on your calculator). This doesn't simply squash the vertical scale. It distorts it as well, to such an extent that the only useful thing the graph now shows is the major jumps where the next electron to be removed comes from an inner level. The distortion is so great in the first 8 ionisation energies, for example, that the patterns shown by the previous graph are completely (and misleadingly) destroyed.