Orbital notation provides a visual representation of an atom's electron configuration using arrows and boxes to indicate electron placements in orbitals. This approach helps in understanding the distribution and pairing of electrons.
For aluminum and fluorine, the orbital notation illustrates the transfer of electrons that forms the ionic bond:
- Aluminum (Al) before bonding:
[↓↑]₁s [↓↑]₂s [↓↑]₂p (↓)₃s (↓)₃p
- Fluorine (F) before bonding:
[↓↑]₁s [↓↑]₂s [↓↑]₂p (↓↓↓__)
During the formation of an ionic bond, one aluminum atom loses electrons, filling the 2p orbital in three separate fluorine atoms. This results in:
- Al³⁺ ion:
[↓↑]₁s [↓↑]₂s [↓↑]₂p
- F⁻ ion:
[↓↑]₁s [↓↑]₂s [↓↑]₂p (↓↓↓↓↑) for each F⁻ ion
This notation clearly depicts how aluminum's electrons fill the empty spots in fluorine's valence shell, reinforcing their electrostatic attraction.