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Elements and the Periodic Table

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Title: Elements and the Periodic Table


1
  • Elements and the Periodic Table

2
Classifying Matter
  • Classification is arranging items into groups or
    categories according to some criteria.
  • The act of classifying creates a pattern that
    helps you recognize and understand things such as
    the behavior of fish, chemicals, or any matter in
    your surroundings.

3
Classifying Matter
  • Matter is usually defined as anything that has
    mass and occupies space.
  • Matter occurs in 4 basic states or phases
  • Solid
  • Liquid
  • Gas
  • Plasma

4
SOLIDS
  • Particles in solids are close together,
    vibrating.
  • A solid has a definite shape.
  • A solid has a definite volume.

5
LIQUIDS
  • Particles in liquids have more energy than in a
    solid.
  • Particles are close together, flowing around
    each other.
  • A liquid takes the shape of its container.
  • A liquid has a definite volume.
  • A substance that is somewhere between a solid
    and a liquid is a suspension. Check out this
    colloid suspension http//www.science-house.org/
    CO2/activities/polymer/oobleck.html

6
  • Particles in gases have more energy than a
    liquid and are not close together, but they can
    collide.
  • A gas will fill a container. The larger the
    container, the more gas expands to fill it.
  • A gas has no definite shape or volume because of
    this.

GASES
7
PLASMA
  • Particles in plasma have the greatest energy of
    all states of matter.
  • Plasma occurs when the temperature is between
    1000 degrees C and 1,000,000,000 degrees C.
  • Some examples of plasma are the charged air
    around lightning and stars, including our own
    sun.

8
More about PLASMA
  • As a gas is heated, electrons begin to leave the
    atoms, resulting in the presence of free
    electrons
  • At very high temperatures, such as those present
    in stars, it is assumed that essentially all
    electrons are "free," and that a very high-energy
    plasma is nothing but bare nuclei swimming in a
    sea of electrons.
  • Plasma is believed to be the most common state
    of matter in the universe.
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vUjqEx4ttUDY--plasma
    cutter
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vlRU43nbVaz8--stars
    compared to planets

9
http//www.harcourtschool.com/activity/states_of_m
atter/
Gas
Liquid
Solid
10
The greater the thermal energy of the object,
the faster the particles move.
11
  • The particles at the
  • upper left show the
  • arrangement of
  • particles in ice.
  • The particles at the
  • lower right show
  • what happens to
  • particles as ice melts.
  • A container of water will expand as it freezes
    due to the shape water particles take
    (hexagonal) when changing into the solid state.
  • This shape takes up more room than liquid water
    particlesand there is empty space in the middle
    of the crystal shape.

12
From Solid to Liquid
  • The melting point of a substance is the point at
    which the particles have gained enough energy so
    as to fall out of order and begin to flow around
    one another.
  • The melting point of water at sea level is 32 F
    (0 C).
  • The melting point of aluminum at sea level is
    1220.58 F (660.32 C).

13
From Liquid to Solid
  • The freezing point of a substance is the point at
    which the particles have lost enough energy so as
    to fall into order and stop the flow of particles
    around one another.
  • The freezing point and melting point of a
    particular substance is the same.
  • It depends on whether energy is being added or
    taken away.
  • The freezing point of water at sea level is 32 F
    (0 C).
  • The freezing point of aluminum at sea level is
    1220.58 F (660.32 C).

14
From Liquid to Gas
  • When particles have gained enough energy so that
    they move away from each other with empty space
    between, they have reached the point of
    vaporization.
  • Substances that vaporize throughout are said to
    have reached the boiling point.
  • Substances that vaporize on the surface are said
    to have evaporated.
  • The boiling point of water at sea level is 212 F
    (100 C).
  • The boiling point of aluminum is 4566 F (2519
    C) at sea level.

15
MIXTURES AND PURE SUBSTANCES
  • A mixture has unlike parts and a composition that
    varies from sample to sample. (Ex. Halloween
    candy, salt and pepper)
  • A heterogeneous mixture has physically distinct
    parts with different properties. (Ex. vegetable
    soup, nuts and bolts)
  • A homogeneous mixture is the same throughout the
    sample. (Ex. Kool-Aid, salt water, bronze, air)
  • Pure substances are substances with a fixed
    composition. (Ex. water alone, salt alone, iron
    alone, carbon dioxide alone)

16
Pure Substances
  • A compound is a pure substance that can be broken
    down by a chemical change into simpler
    substances.
  • Water, H20, is a pure substance that can be
    broken down into 2 hydrogen atoms and one oxygen
    atom.
  • An element is a pure substance which cannot be
    broken down into anything simpler by either
    physical or chemical means.
  • Hydrogenor any other element on the periodic
    table is an element that, under normal
    circumstances, cannot be broken down further
    without being changed into energy.
  • Hindenburg Disaster http//www.youtube.com/watch
    ?vJSuR2IgnimA
  • Blimp filled with hydrogen
  • 35 of 97 On board died
  • Hydrogen Bomb http//www.youtube.com/watch?vNNcQ
    X033V_M

17
Ways Stuff Can Change
  • A physical change is a change that does not alter
    the identity of the matter.
  • Ice melting is a physical change. It is still
    water, no matter what state of matter it is in.
  • Tearing paper is physical. It is still paper.
  • A chemical change is a change that does alter the
    identity of the matter.
  • Breaking apart H20 is a chemical change. It is
    no longer water when the molecule is broken
    apart. It becomes two gaseshydrogen and oxygen.
  • http//www.periodictable.com/Stories/001.1/
  • Burning sugarC6H1206breaks it down into carbon,
    water, and carbon dioxide, which is NOT the same.

18
  • A graphic organizer for matter

19
A
B
  • Sugar (A) is a pure substance that can be easily
    broken into simpler substances by heating. (B)
    One of the simpler substances is the black
    element carbon, which cannot be further
    decomposed by chemical or physical means.

20
ANSWER THIS!
  • Water is a
  • heterogeneous mixture
  • homogeneous mixture
  • pure substance
  • Compound
  • pure substance and compound

Answer E
21
  • Elements

22
First, A Little History . . .
  • The Ancient Idea of Elements
  • Traditionally, early Greeks considered that there
    were four classical elements earth, air, fire,
    and water.

23
First, A Little History . . . continued
  • The Ancient Idea of Elements
  • Later, around 1667, it was thought there was the
    existence of, in addition to the classical four
    elements of the Greeks, an additional fire-like
    element called phlogiston that was contained
    within combustible (burnable) or rustable bodies,
    and released during combustion or rusting .
  • The theory was an attempt to explain oxidation
    processes such as combustion and the rusting of
    metals.

24
First, A Little History . . . continued
  • What the heck is phlogiston?
  • The phlogiston theory from 1667 viewed phlogiston
    as a component of matter.
  • The burning or rusting of a material was
    considered to be the escaping of phlogiston from
    the matter.
  • If a material did not burn or rust, it was
    considered to contain no phlogiston.

25
  • Discovery of Modern Elements
  • In the late 1700s, Antoine Lavoisier of France
    suggested that burning was actually a chemical
    combination with oxygen.
  • Lavoisier realized that there needed to be a new
    concept of elements, compounds, and chemical
    change.
  • We now know that there are 89 naturally-occurring
    elements and at least 23 short-lived and
    artificially prepared elements.
  • The elements of the periodic table are believed
    to be all the elements that exist in the
    universe!
  • Click here to see how we know
    http//spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys301/lectures/spec
    tra/spec_proper_orientation.gif

26
  • Names of Elements
  • The first 103 elements have internationally
    accepted names, which can come from
  • An unusual or identifying property of the element
  • Places, cities, and countries
  • Famous scientists
  • Greek mythology
  • Astronomical objects

27
  • The elements of aluminum, Iron, Oxygen, and
    Silicon make up about 88 percent of the earth's
    solid surface.
  • Water on the surface and in the air as clouds and
    fog is made up of hydrogen and oxygen.
  • The air is 99 percent nitrogen and oxygen.
  • Hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon make up 97 percent
    of a person.
  • Thus almost everything you see in this picture is
    made up of just seven elements.

28
Atomic Theory
29
Democritusthe Greek Dude
  • Lived from 480 BC to 370 BC
  • Was a Greek philosopher
  • He created a theory that argued that there are
    various basic elements which always existed but
    can be rearranged into many different forms.
  • Quote By convention there is sweet, by
    convention there is bitterness, by convention hot
    and cold, by convention color but in reality
    there are only atoms and the void.
  • Named the parts of matter atomos, which means
    uncuttable.

30
John Dalton
  • Lived 6 September 1766 27 July 1844
  • Was a schoolteacher and scientist in England
  • Thought atoms were tiny solid masses
  • Dalton first published his theories on atoms in
    1808 in a small book titled A New System of
    Chemical Philosophy. The book had an enormous
    influence on the development of both chemistry
    and physics.

31
John Daltons Atomic Theory
  • Elements are made of tiny particles called atoms.
  • All atoms of a given element are identical.
  • The atoms of a given element are different from
    those of any other element.
  • Atoms of one element can combine with atoms of
    other elements to form chemical compounds a
    given compound always has the same relative
    numbers of types of atoms.
  • Atoms cannot be created, divided into smaller
    particles, nor destroyed in the chemical process
    a chemical reaction simply changes the way atoms
    are grouped together.

32
Daltons Laws
  • The Law of Constant Composition
  • Any given compound always consists of the same
    atoms and the same ratio of atoms. For example,
    water always consists of oxygen and hydrogen
    atoms, and it is always 89 percent oxygen by
    mass and 11 percent hydrogen by mass.
  • The Law of Conservation of Mass
  • The total mass of materials before and after a
    chemical
  • reaction must be the same. For example, if we
    combine
  • 89 grams of oxygen with 11 grams of hydrogen
    under
  • the appropriate conditions, 100 grams of water
    will be
  • producedno more and no less.

33
Making Sense of the Elements
34
Pre-Periodic Table Chemistry
  • was a mess!!!
  • No organization of elements
  • Difficult to find information
  • Chemistry didnt make sense.

35
Why Is the Periodic Table Important?
  • The periodic table is the most useful tool to a
    chemist.
  • It organizes lots of information about all the
    known elements.

36
  • Dmitri Mendeleev
  • Born in 1834 in Siberia, the youngest of 14
    children, died in 1907
  • Gave us a functional scheme with which to
    classify elements

37
Dmitri Mendeleev Father of the Periodic Table
  • HOW HIS WORKED
  • Put elements in rows by increasing atomic weight.
  • Put elements in columns by the way they reacted.
  • SOME PROBLEMS
  • He left blank spaces for what he said were
    undiscovered elements. (Turned out he was
    right!)
  • He broke the pattern of increasing atomic weight
    to keep similar reacting elements together.

38
Mendeleevs Periodic Table
39
The Modern Periodic Table
http//www.chemicalelements.com/elements/ba.html
40
The Current Periodic Table
  • Mendeleev wasnt too far off.
  • Now the elements are put in rows by increasing
    ATOMIC NUMBER!!
  • The horizontal rows are called periods and are
    labeled from 1 to 7.
  • The vertical columns are called groups or
    families and are labeled from 1 to 18.

41
Understanding the TableChemical Elements
  • The atomic number is the number of protons in
    the nucleus.
  • The atomic mass or weight is the protons plus
    the neutrons in the nucleus (total weight of the
    nucleus).
  • Electrons have so very little mass that they
    are not included in the atomic mass.
  • The number of protons always remains the same
    for each element. Example Carbon ALWAYS has 6
    protons.

42
(No Transcript)
43
Isotopes
  • Atoms of the same element can have different
    numbers of neutrons the different possible
    versions of each element are called isotopes.

44
Groups Columns on the Periodic Table
  • Elements in the same group have similar chemical
    and physical properties!!
  • (Mendeleev did that on purpose.)
  • Why??
  • They have the same number of valence electrons.
  • They will form the same kinds of ions.

45
Nitrogen
Valence electrons are the electrons in the
outside energy level of an atom.
Valence Electrons
Valence Electrons
http//www.chemicalelements.com/elements/n.html
46
(No Transcript)
47
Forming Ions
-
Chlorine (Cl )
Sodium (Na )

48
Families on the Periodic Table
  • Columns are also grouped into families.
  • Families may be one column, or several columns
    put together.
  • Families often have names rather than numbers.
    (Just like your family has a common last name.)
  • www.periodicvideos.com

49
Hydrogen
  • Hydrogen belongs to a family of its own.
  • Hydrogen is a diatomic, reactive gas.
  • Hydrogen was involved in the explosion of the
    Hindenberg.
  • Hydrogen is promising as an alternative fuel
    source for automobiles
  • Hydrogen only needs 2 electrons to fill up its
    valence shell.

http//www.youtube.com/watch?vF54rqDh2mWA
50
Alkali Metals
  • The alkali family is found in the first column of
    the periodic table.
  • Atoms of the alkali metals have a single electron
    in their outermost level, in other words, 1
    valence electron.
  • They are shiny, have the consistency of clay, and
    are easily cut with a knife.

51
Alkali Metals
  • They are the most reactive metals.
  • They react violently with water.
  • Alkali metals are never found as free elements in
    nature. They are always bonded with another
    element.
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vYvSkXd_VVYkNR1fe
    aturefvwp

52
What Makes an Element Reactive?
  • An incomplete valence electron level.
  • All atoms (except hydrogen helium) want to
    have 8 electrons in their very outermost energy
    level (This is called the rule of octet.)
  • Atoms bond until this level is complete. Atoms
    with few valence electrons lose them during
    bonding.
  • Atoms with 5, 6 or 7 valence electrons gain
    electrons during bonding.

53
Alkaline Earth Metals
  • Second column on the periodic table (Group 2)
  • Reactive metals that are always combined with
    nonmetals in nature
  • Several of these elements are important mineral
    nutrients (such as Mg and Ca).
  • Many are used in the production of fireworks.

54
Transition Metals
  • Elements in groups
  • 3-12
  • Less reactive harder metals
  • Includes metals used in jewelry and construction
  • Metals in this family are used as metals.

55
Transition Metals
  • The compounds of transition metals are usually
    brightly colored and are often used to color
    paints.
  • Transition elements have 1 or 2 valence
    electrons, which they lose when they form bonds
    with other atoms. Some transition elements can
    lose electrons in their next-to-outermost level.

56
Transition Metals
  • Transition elements have properties similar to
    one another and to other metals, but their
    properties do not fit in with those of any other
    family.
  • Many transition metals combine chemically with
    oxygen to form compounds called oxides.

Iron oxideruston iron
57
Boron Family
  • Elements in group 13 have 3 valence electrons.
  • Includes metals and one metalloidBoron.
  • Aluminum, the most abundant metal in Earths
    crust, was once considered rare and expensive--
    not a disposable metal.

58
Carbon Family
  • Elements in group 14 have 4 valence electrons.
  • Contains elements important to life--and
    computers.
  • Carbon is the basis for an entire branch of
    chemistry (organic chemistry).
  • Silicon and Germanium are important
    semiconductors used in computer chips.
  • This family includes a non-metal (carbon),
    metalloids, and metals.
  • Carbon has many forms, some of which are
  • Radioactive
  • Diamond
  • Graphite
  • Buckminsterfullerene

59
Nitrogen Family
  • Elements in group 15 have 5 valence electrons.
  • They tend to share electrons when they bond.
  • This family includes non-metals, metalloids, and
    metals.
  • Nitrogen makes up over 75 of the atmosphere.
  • Nitrogen and phosphorus are both important in
    living things.
  • The red stuff on the tip of matches is
    phosphorus.
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vrPbE2KSPxuUfeature
    related
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v1DxLwZhTj0A

60
Oxygen Family
  • Elements in group 16 have
  • 6 valence electrons.
  • Oxygen is necessary for
  • respiration.
  • Many things that stink,
  • contain sulfur (rotten eggs,
  • garlic, skunks, etc.).
  • Most elements in this family
  • share electrons when forming compounds.
  • Oxygen is the most abundant element in the
    earths crust. It is extremely active and
    combines with almost all elements.

61
Halogens
  • Halogens are in group 17 and have 7 valence
    electrons, which explains why they are the most
    active non-metals. Always found combined with
    other elements in nature.
  • They are very reactive diatomic nonmetals.
  • Used as disinfectants and to strengthen teeth
  • Halogen atoms only need to gain 1 electron to
    fill their outermost energy level.
  • They react with alkali metals to form salts.

62
The Noble Gases
63
The Noble Gases
  • Elements in group 18 have 8 valence electrons.
  • They are VERY unreactive, monatomic gases.
  • Also called inert, meaning unreactive
  • Used in lighted neon signs
  • Used in blimps to fix the Hindenberg problem
  • Have a full valence shell
  • All the noble gases are found in small amounts in
    the earth's atmosphere.

64
Rare Earth Elements
  • The thirty rare earth elements make up the
    lanthanide (row 1) and actinide (row 2) series.
  • One element of the lanthanide series and most of
    the elements in the actinide series are called
    trans-uranium, which means synthetic or man-made.
  • Magnets made from rare earth elements are some of
    the strongest.

65
Metals, Nonmetals, Metalloids
  • Metal Elements that are usually solids at room
    temperature.
  • Most elements are metals.
  • Non-Metal Elements in the upper right corner of
    the periodic table.
  • Their chemical and physical properties are
    different from metals.
  • Metalloid Elements that share some properties
    with metals, some with nonmetals.
  • They can conduct electricity better than
    nonmetals, but not as good as some metals.

66
What Can a Row (Period) Tell You?
  • The row an element is in tells how many energy
    levels it has.
  • There are seven rows, so the maximum number of
    energy levels is 7!

67
More Information on Ionic Bonds
  • When two or more atoms combine, the compound as a
    whole is neutral because the sum of the ions is
    zero.
  • When an atom or molecule gain or loses an
    electron it becomes an ion.
  • A cation has lost an electron and has a positive
    charge.
  • An anion has gained an electron and has a
    negative charge.
  • Therefore, a cation with a 1 and an anion with a
    -1 add up to a ZERO charge.

68
Remember Salt
-
Chlorine (Cl )
Sodium (Na )

Cation
Anion
69
Another Ionic Bond
  • Magnesium chloride
  • MgCl2 is the chemical formula.
  • Magnesium is in Group 2Alkaline Earth Metalsso
    it has 2 valence electrons to give up.
  • Chlorine, in Group 17the Halogensneeds only one
    valence electron, so it takes 2 chlorines to
    neutralize Magnesium.

70
Electron Configuration of MgCl2
-1
X
2
-1
X
71
Electron Dot Diagrams
  • Electron dot diagrams are another way to show
    bonding using just the valence electrons.
  • Sodium and all others in the Alkali Metals group
    would have one dot.
  • Na

72
Using Dot Diagrams to Show Bonding
Na Cl -
  • Na Cl
  • Sodium has one valence electron.
  • Chlorine has 7 valence electrons.
  • When they bond, you can see how chlorine now
    has a stable outer shell.
  • You also know sodium is now stable since it got
    rid of its single valence electron.

73
Sharing Electrons
  • Another kind of bond is called a covalent bond.
  • Covalent means sharing valence electrons.
  • The shared bond results in a molecule.
  • Covalent bonds form between nonmetallic elements.
  • Many covalent compounds are liquids or gases at
    room temperature.

74
Single Covalent Bonds
  • Here is an example of a single covalent bond
    where only one electron from each element is
    shared.
  • H H O H O
  • H
  • Now each element has a stable number of
  • valence electrons by sharing!

75
Unequal Sharing
  • Some molecules do not share electrons evenly.
  • Water is a good example.
  • When 2 or more different-sized atoms bond, the
    larger atom usually pulls a little bit more on
    the shared electrons, giving that end of the
    molecule a more negative charge.
  • The other end of the molecule will have a more
    positive charge.

-
H O H

76
Unequal Sharing
  • This unequal sharing is called a polar bond.
  • The molecule now has a NORTH pole and a SOUTH
    polelike a magnet.
  • Water molecules behave like magnets because of
    this.
  • They will attract more water molecules and will
    bead up or hold together to form a skin.

77
Polar Bonds
Water bug standing on water
Water beading up on a car
78
More on Covalent Bonds
  • Heres an example of a diatom
  • N N N N
  • Each nitrogen from Group 15 has 5
  • valence electrons, meaning each needs 3 more
    to be stable.
  • They each share 3 electrons in order to become
  • stable. So, in this case it is a TRIPLE bond
    (sharing 3 electrons each.
  • Nitrogen shares evenly. This is a nonpolar bond.

79
Oxidation Numbers
  • Oxidation numbers of an element are the positive
    or negative numbers (ions) that indicate how many
    electrons an atom gains, loses, or shares to
    become stable.
  • Calcium in group 2 has an oxidation number of 2.
  • Fluorine in group 17 has an oxidation number of
    1- (it needs one electron to be stable).
  • Therefore, it will take two fluorines to deal
    with
  • the two electrons calcium has to offer.
  • The chemical formula will then be CaF2.

80
Why Does it form CaF2?
  • Ca F

F
Ca F
  • Calcium has 2 valence
  • electrons to give away.
  • Fluorine needs only one of
  • those. Therefore, 2 fluorines
  • are needed to bond with calcium.
  • Is this an ionic or covalent bond?

81
Periodic Table Link
  • http//www.periodicvideos.com/
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