Title: The Periodic Table
1The Periodic Table
2The Periodic Table
- History and Development
- Arrangement and Organization of Elements
- Finding Information
3History of the Table
- What was the table like before Demetri
Mendeleev ? - What did he do to improve it?
- Has it changed since Mendeleev?
4Early Study of the Elements
- Beguyer de Chancourtois - 1862 - geologist
arranged elements by atomic weights about a
cylinder - Meyer 1895 plotted atomic volume against
molecular weight found 2 short periods and 2
long periods on his graph - Newlands - English
- 1864 - Law of Octaves - every 8th element has
similar properties
5Stanislao Cannizzaro
- Discovered a new way to calculate atomic mass
- Scientists everywhere agreed this was a very
reliable method - Provided a sense of order for the elements
6The Periodic Law
- The physical and chemical properties of the
elements are periodic functions o their atomic
numbers. - OR when elements are arranged in order of
increasing atomic number, elements with similar
properties appear at regular intervals
7Development of Periodic Table
- Periodic Law 1869
- allowed Mendeleev to predict properties of
unknown elements
8Mendeleevs Periodic Table
- arranged elements according to
- increasing atomic weights
- physical properties
- metal/nonmetal
- melting points, boiling points, density,
reactivity - Many later discoveries support Mendeleevs table
9Missing elements 44, 68, 72, 100 amu
10Mendeleevs Table - Irregularities
- When arranged by similar properties, a few
elements were out of place by atomic mass - There were some empty spaces in the table
11Moseleys Contribution
- Moseley, Henry Gwyn Jeffreys
- 18871915, English physicist.
- Studied the relations among bright-line spectra
of different elements. - Derived the ATOMIC NUMBERS from the frequencies
of vibration of X-rays emitted by each element. - Moseley concluded that the atomic number is equal
to the charge on the nucleus. - This work explained discrepancies in Mendeleevs
Periodic Table.
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13The Periodic Table
The elements on the table are now arranged
according to increasing Atomic Number
14Organization of Periodic Table
- period
- group
- type of element
- physical properties
- mp, bp, density, conductivity
- chemical reactivity
- ionization energy, electron affinity,
electronegativity
15Organization and Arrangement
- period - horizontal row
- group or family - vertical column
16Types of Elements
- metals
- nonmetals
- metalloids - semimetals
17Periodic Table of the Elements
18Family Names
- Group IA alkali metals
- Group IIA alkaline earth metals
- Group VIIA halogens
- Group VIIIA noble gases
- metalloids
- transition metals
- inner transition metals
- lanthanum series rare earths
- actinium series trans-uranium series
19The Periodic Table
Know what information you can find and where to
find it
20Finding Information
- A periodic table is always available to you. To
be successful in chemistry, you must know - the names and symbols
- later many of the ions that form
- how to find number of protons, neutrons, and
electrons in an element - how to read the other information on the table.
21Information foundon the Periodic Table
- Chemical symbol
- Atomic number
- Atomic Mass
- Protons in atom
- Electrons in atom
- Neutrons in atom
- Metal / Nonmetal
- Chemical activity
- Oxidation number
- Energy levels
- Electron configuration
- Chemical Families
- Natural / Manmade
- Physical state at room temperature
22Metals
Nonmetals
Noble gases do not react
Chemical Activity
231
0
2
-1
-2
-3
4
3
M o s t a r e 1 o r 2
Oxidation Number
24 s
p
1
He
2
3 d
3
4
5
6
7
4 f
Energy levels and sublevels
25The End