San K said:
is there no minimum value for the quantum?
No.
San K said:
or
is frequency quantized?
The frequencies of a system are very often constrained to discrete values.
This is true even in classical mechanics. For instance, the resonant modes of a violin string have discrete frequencies. The boundary conditions of the string cause the wavelengths of the string to change by discrete values. This results in the frequencies changing by discrete values.
This discrete division between notes of a stringed instrument have been known since Aristotle. Probably even before Aristotle. Newton understood frequencies of vibrations on strings. However, the separate frequencies on a string were not called quanta.
The resonant frequencies of a hydrogen atom are caused by the periodic boundary conditions of the electron-wave. In that sense, they are like the waves on a violin string. However, the discrete values of frequency are not the direct result of an ad hoc hypothesis.
What is really quantized in a hydrogen atom is radius of the electron's orbit. The radius of the electrons orbit is a type of amplitude. You can think of the radius as the limit of the back and forth motion of the electron. It is this radius, which is a type of amplitude, which is quantized. The discrete values of frequency are an indirect consequence of the fact that the radius is "quantized". The frequencies aren't quantized, but the radii are quantized.
You have to be careful about the word quantized. The word is not quite synonymous with discrete. Quantization is a type of discreteness.
Maybe the word "digitized would be better. No, I take that back. There are certain qualifications to a digital system.
The "quantization" first hypothesized by Planck referred to
or
San K said:
does quantization only make sense when in a bounded state at a specific orbital/energy level/shell in an atom?
Discrete values for frequency usually make sense for bounded states. The real reason frequencies change in discrete values is because of the boundary conditions on the wave. The violin string is a good analog.
The reason that the notes of a violin string are discrete is because the violin string is fixed on both ends. Thus, the violin string has to be "bounded" in order to produce notes. Notes are bounded states! A violin string that isn't tied down does not produce separate notes.
A propose that frequencies should never be called quantized. Frequencies are merely discrete.