Effective Nuclear Charge Calculator
Calculate Zeff using Slater's Rules to understand electron shielding and periodic trends in atomic properties
⚛️ Calculate Effective Nuclear Charge
Format: 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p5 (spaces between orbitals)
Select an element to calculate its effective nuclear charge using Slater's Rules
📊 Calculation Results
Atomic Number (Z)
-
Shielding Constant (S)
-
Effective Nuclear Charge
-
Calculation Breakdown:
💡 Interpretation
⚖️ Periodic Trend Context
📐 Effective Nuclear Charge Formulas
Basic Formula
Where:
- • Zeff = Effective nuclear charge (net positive charge felt by electron)
- • Z = Atomic number (number of protons in nucleus)
- • S = Shielding/screening constant (electron repulsion effect)
Slater's Rules for Shielding Constant
Configuration Groups: (1s) (2s,2p) (3s,3p) (3d) (4s,4p) (4d) (4f) (5s,5p)...
For s or p electrons:
• Electrons in same group: +0.35 each (except 1s: +0.30 each)
• Electrons in (n-1) shell: +0.85 each
• Electrons in (n-2) and lower: +1.00 each
For d or f electrons:
• Electrons in same group: +0.35 each
• All electrons to the left: +1.00 each
Example: Chlorine (Cl) 3p Electron
Chlorine: Z = 17, Configuration: (1s²)(2s²2p⁶)(3s²3p⁵)
For a 3p electron:
• Same group (3s²3p⁴): 6 electrons × 0.35 = 2.10
• (n-1) shell (2s²2p⁶): 8 electrons × 0.85 = 6.80
• (n-2) shell (1s²): 2 electrons × 1.00 = 2.00
S = 2.10 + 6.80 + 2.00 = 10.90
Zeff = 17 - 10.90 = 6.10
What is Effective Nuclear Charge?
Effective nuclear charge (Zeff) is the net positive charge experienced by an electron in a multi-electron atom—while the nucleus contains Z protons creating a +Z charge, inner electrons partially shield outer electrons from this full nuclear attraction through electron-electron repulsion, making the actual attractive force felt by any given electron less than the full nuclear charge would suggest.
This concept, formalized by John C. Slater in 1930, explains why electrons in the same atom have different ionization energies—a 1s electron in oxygen experiences nearly the full nuclear charge (Zeff ≈ 7.7) because no other electrons shield it, while a 2p electron experiences only Zeff ≈ 4.5 because inner electrons block much of the nuclear attraction, making the 2p electron easier to remove despite being in the same atom.
Effective nuclear charge governs virtually all atomic properties including atomic radius (higher Zeff = smaller radius), ionization energy (higher Zeff = harder to remove electron), electron affinity, and electronegativity—understanding Zeff trends across the periodic table (increases left-to-right, slight increase down groups) explains why fluorine is the most electronegative element and why atomic size decreases across periods despite adding electrons.
📚 Slater's Rules: Complete Guide
Step 1: Write Electron Configuration in Groups
Organize electrons into groups based on shell and subshell:
(1s) (2s,2p) (3s,3p) (3d) (4s,4p) (4d) (4f) (5s,5p) (5d) (5f) (6s,6p)...
Note: s and p electrons in the same shell are grouped together
Step 2: Identify the Electron of Interest
Determine which electron's Zeff you're calculating—typically the outermost valence electron, as this determines chemical reactivity and atomic properties.
Step 3: Apply Shielding Rules
Calculate S by summing contributions from all other electrons:
For s or p electrons:
1. Electrons to the right (higher n): contribute 0 (no shielding)
2. Same group: +0.35 each (or +0.30 for 1s)
3. One shell lower (n-1): +0.85 each
4. Two+ shells lower (n-2, n-3...): +1.00 each
For d or f electrons:
1. Same group: +0.35 each
2. All electrons in lower shells: +1.00 each
Step 4: Calculate Zeff
Subtract shielding constant from atomic number:
📈 Periodic Trends in Zeff
Across a Period (Left to Right)
Zeff increases—nuclear charge increases by +1 for each element, but shielding increases only slightly (~0.35 per electron) because added electrons are in the same shell, making the effective attraction stronger and atoms smaller.
Down a Group (Top to Bottom)
Zeff increases slightly—though nuclear charge increases significantly, inner shells provide substantial shielding. Valence Zeff grows gradually, but atomic size increases because electrons occupy higher energy levels farther from nucleus.
Impact on Atomic Properties
Higher Zeff means: smaller atomic radius (electrons pulled closer), higher ionization energy (harder to remove electron), higher electronegativity (stronger attraction for bonding electrons), and more negative electron affinity (more energy released when gaining electron).
🔬 Real-World Application:
Fluorine has the highest Zeff for valence electrons (5.2) among halogens, making it the most electronegative element. This explains why fluorine forms the strongest single bonds and reacts violently with almost everything—its valence electrons experience exceptional nuclear attraction.
⚠️ Important Considerations
📏 Slater's Rules Are Approximations:
Slater's rules provide estimates accurate to within 5-10% of quantum mechanical calculations—they assume spherical orbitals and uniform electron distribution, ignoring orbital shape complexity and electron correlation effects. For precise values, quantum chemistry computations are needed, but Slater's method offers excellent qualitative predictions.
🔄 Different Electrons Experience Different Zeff:
Within the same atom, inner electrons experience higher Zeff than outer electrons—in sodium, 1s electrons feel Zeff ≈ 10.6, 2s/2p electrons feel Zeff ≈ 6.6, but the valence 3s electron feels only Zeff ≈ 2.2, explaining why the 3s electron is easily removed (low ionization energy) while inner electrons are tightly bound.
⚛️ Transition Metals Show Unique Behavior:
Transition elements (d-block) have complex Zeff trends because added electrons enter inner d orbitals while s electrons remain in the outermost shell—this causes irregular size and ionization energy patterns across transition series, with some elements showing anomalous properties like chromium's [Ar]3d⁵4s¹ configuration for enhanced stability.
🌟 Explains Noble Gas Stability:
Noble gases have exceptionally high Zeff for their periods (He: 1.7, Ne: 5.85, Ar: 6.75) because their valence shells are full, minimizing electron-electron repulsion while maximizing nuclear attraction—this high effective charge makes them chemically inert, as adding or removing electrons would significantly destabilize the favorable electron configuration.
About the Author
Adam
Co-Founder @RevisionTown
Math Expert specializing in diverse international curricula including IB (International Baccalaureate), AP (Advanced Placement), GCSE, IGCSE, and various other educational programs worldwide.
Connect on LinkedIn