Title: Chapter 5 The Periodic Table
1Chapter 5The Periodic Table
2Discovery of the Elements
- Many elements known since ancient times
- Gold
- Silver
- Copper
- Mercury
3Discovery of the Elements
- 1649
- First scientific discovery of an element
- Hennig Brand discovered phosphorus
- 200 years of discovery and knowledge-gathering
followed - 1869
- Total of 63 elements had been discovered
- Scientists began recognizing patterns in
properties and developed classification schemes
4Johann Dobereiner (1817)
- German Chemist
- Proposed that nature contained triads of elements
- Law of Triads
- The middle element had properties that were an
average of the other two members when ordered by
the atomic weight
5E. Beguyer de Chancourtois (1863)
- 44 year old French Geologist
- Transcribed the list of elements positioned in a
cylinder in terms of increasing atomic weight - 16 mass units per turn
- closely related elements lined up vertically
- First geometric representation of periodic law
- first to recognize elemental properties reoccur
every seven elements - Errors his chart included ions and compounds
6John A. R. Newlands (1863)
- 32 year old English Chemist
- wrote a paper classifying the 56 established
elements into 11 groups based on similar physical
properties - Proposed Law of Octaves
- Musical scale
- Any given element will exhibit behavior analogous
to the 8th element following it in the table - Ignored by English Chemical Society
- (ideas absurd)
7Two men working independently about the same time
published periodic tables which are very
similarhowever only 1 is recognized as the
Father of the Periodic Table. Why???
- Mendeleev published first
- Meyer did not leave room for elements yet
undiscovered but Mendeleev did
8Lothar Meyer (1868-1870)
- German Chemist
- Published periodic table that was accurate for
all elements known at the time - Based upon facts about each element
- Melting point
- Atomic volume
- Showed existence of periodic chemical families
- Was not known publicly until 1870
9Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev
- 35 year old Russian scientist and professor (born
1834, died 1907) - published table in 1869
10Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev
- Showed periodic chemical families based upon
known facts (like Meyer) but also left gaps for
elements not yet discovered - Shows vertical, horizontal, diagonal
relationships - Predicted what properties those undiscovered
elements would have and what state (solid,
liquid, gas) they would most likely be in - For most of his predictions he was amazingly
accurate!
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13Noble Gas Discoveries
- Lord Rayleigh (1895)
- Discovered new gaseous element named argon
(chemically inert) - Did not fit any of the known periodic groups
- William Ramsey (1898)
- Suggested argon be placed into the periodic table
between chlorine and potassium in a family with
helium - This went against atomic weights
- Group was termed the zero group due to
unreactiveness - Accurately predicted future discovery and
properties of neon
14Ernest Rutherford andHenry Moseley (1911-1913)
- Established atomic number
- positively charged protons
- Reordered the periodic table based on atomic
numbers instead of atomic weights - PERIODIC LAW
- when elements are arranged in order of increasing
atomic number their physical and chemical
properties show a periodic pattern
15Periodic Tables Today
Dr. Timothy Stowes physicists periodic table
16Periodic Tables Today
The periodic spiral of Professor Theodor Benfey
17Periodic Tables Today
A triangular long form periodic table by Emil
Zmaczynski
18Periodic Tables Today
Albert Tarantolas orbital periodic table
195-2Reading The Periodic Table
- If you know how the periodic table is
arrangedyou can predict the properties of an
element by knowing its location
20Families or Groups
- Columns
- Elements with similar properties
- 18 groups
21Periods or Rows
- across the table
- 7 periods
- How many elements in each?
- Period 1
- Period 2
- Period 3
- Period 4
- Period 5
- Period 6
- Period 7
2
8
WHY???
8
18
18
32
Could be 32 if known
22Naming of Groups (Families)
- European (Roman)
- American (Roman, now Arabic numerals)
- IUPAC tried to resolve 2 systems
23Names of Groups
- Alkali metals 1
- Alkaline earth metals 2
- Transition metals all d-block families (groups
3-12) - Inner transition metals all f-block families
- Halogens 17
- Noble gases 18
- Some named after first element in group
- B, C, O, N (groups 13-16)
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25METALS
- (p166-167 light blue)
- Conduct heat and electricity
- Solids (except Hg)
- Malleable and ductile
- Have luster or shine
26NONMETALS
- (p166-167 pink)
- No luster
- Not malleable
- Poor conductors
- Not ductile
- Most are gases at Room temperature (but some
solids and one liquid)
27METALLOIDS
- (p166-167 purple)
- Semimetals
- Diagonal between metals and nonmetals
- Share properties
28Electron Configuration and Periodic Table
- Valence Electrons
- Electrons responsible for an elements chemical
behavior - outermost electrons
- Elements of a family have similar properties
because they have valence electrons in similar
configuration
29Electron Configuration and Periodic Table
- Key to shape ? arranged by electron
configuration - s-block p-block d-block f-block
- Look at abbreviated configuration
- Use Noble gas symbol
- Lithium 1s22s1 or He2s1
- Sodium 1s22s22p63s1 or Ne3s1
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315-3 Periodic Trends
- Many properties of the elements change in a
predictable way as you move through the periodic
table
32Atomic Radius
- distance from center of nucleus to outermost
electrons - Hard to determine use distance between nuclei in
different atoms of different molecules (a) - Ex Cl2 (two chlorine atoms bonded)
a 0.198 nm Soradius of one Cl is 0.198/2
0.99 nm
33Atomic Radius
- Atoms get larger down a group due to increase in
of protons, neutrons, and electrons - Atoms get smaller in each period (left ? right)
- WHY???
34Atomic Radius
- Moving down a family
- As quantum number increases the number of
electrons increases - Size increases
- Moving across a period
- Gain protons
- More protons means greater pull on electrons
- smaller Radius
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36Ionic Size
- Remember, an ion is an atom that has GAINED or
LOST electrons - When atom loses e- it becomes smaller
- Ex Li 0.152nm ? Li 0.060nm
- Due to decreased repulsion between electrons
- When atom gains e- it becomes larger
- Ex F 0.064nm ? F- 0.136nm
- Due to increased repulsion between electrons
37- Elements within the SAME FAMILY form ions with
the SAME CHARGE - Li Na K Rb Cs etc
38Ionization Energy
- energy needed to REMOVE one of an atoms electrons
- Li ? Li e- 8.64 10-19 joules/atom
- Usual unit
- KJ/mole
- Ionization energy 521 kJ/mol
- Mole is a quantity of atoms
39Ionization Energy
- How strongly an atom HOLDS ONTO its outermost
electrons - ? Ionization Energy hold tightly to electrons
gains electrons becomes NEGATIVELY charged - Ionization Energy hold loosely to electrons
loses electrons becomes POSITIVELY charged
40Electronegativity
- Reflects an atoms ability to ATTRACT electrons
in a chemical bond - Flourine most electronegative with a value of
4.0 - Cs and Fr least electronegative with values of
0.7
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42- Ionization Energy and Electronegativity have
similar trends
INCREASES