Title: Part I - Introduction to the Periodic Table
1Unit 3.2 Part I - Introduction to the Periodic
Table
2- History of the Periodic Table
3The Search for a Periodic Table
- Until 1800s no clear system
- Elements grouped by similar properties or atomic
mass
- In 1829, J.W. Döbereiner classified some elements
into groups of three, which he called triads.
4Döbereiners Triads
- The elements in a triad had similar chemical
properties, and their physical properties varied
in an orderly way according to their atomic
masses.
Element Atomic mass (g) Density (g/mL) Melting point (C) Boiling point (C)
Chlorine 35.5 0.00321 -101 -34
Bromine 79.9 3.12 -7 59
Iodine 127 4.93 114 185
5Döbereiners Triads
Element Atomic mass (g) Density (g/mL) Melting point (C) Boiling point (C)
Chlorine 35.5 0.00321 -101 -34
Bromine 79.9 3.12 -7 59
Iodine 127 4.93 114 185
- Density increases with increasing atomic mass.
- The concept of triads suggested that the
properties of an element are related to its
atomic mass.
6Which of the Dobereiner triads shown are still
listed in the same column of the modern periodic
table?
Triad 1 Triad 2 Triad 3
Li Mn S
Na Cr Se
K Fe Te
7Mendeleevs Periodic Table
- The Russian chemist, Dmitri Mendeleev, developed
a periodic table of elements.
- organized the elements according to increasing
atomic mass.
8Mendeleevs Periodic Table
- Mendeleev later developed an improved version of
his table with the elements arranged in
horizontal rows.
9Mendeleevs Periodic Table
- Patterns of changing properties repeated for the
elements across the horizontal rows.
- Elements in vertical columns have similar
properties.
10Mendeleevs Periodic Table
- properties of the elements repeat in an orderly
way from row to row of the table.
- This repeated pattern is an example of
periodicity in the properties of elements.
- Periodicity is the tendency to recur at regular
intervals.
11Mendeleevs Periodic Table
- In order to group elements with similar
properties in the same columns, Mendeleev had to
leave some blank spaces in his table.
- He suggested that these spaces represented
undiscovered elements.
Mendeleev correctly predicted the properties
of several undiscovered elements. Why is this
important?
12Mendeleevs Periodic Table
13What are two factors that contributed to the
acceptance of Mendeleevs periodic law?
- Grouping of elements with similar chemical
properties - Ability to predict properties of undiscovered
elements
14(No Transcript)
15The Modern Periodic Table
- the basis for ordering the elements in the table
is the atomic number, not atomic mass.
- The atomic number of an element is equal to the
number of protons in the nucleus.
- Each row (except the first) begins with a metal
and ends with a noble gas.
16The Modern Periodic Table
- In between, the properties of the elements change
in an orderly progression from left to right.
- This regular cycle illustrates periodicity in the
properties of the elements.
17The Modern Periodic Table
- periodic law - physical and chemical properties
of the elements repeat in a regular pattern when
they are arranged in order of increasing atomic
number
18Use the periodic table to separate these 12
elements into 6 pairs fo elements having similair
properties.Ca, K, Ga, P, Si, Rb, B, Sr, Sn, Cl,
Bi, Br
Ca K Ga P Si Cl
Sr Rb B Bi Sn Br
19- Layout of the Periodic Table
20Layout of the periodic table
- A group, also called a family, consists of the
elements in a vertical column.
21Groups are numbered 1 18 ORIA VIIIA for
main group elements andIB VIIIB for transition
elements
22As you move left to right across a period the
number of valence electrons increases by one
1 valence e-
3 valence e-
2 valence e-
4 valence e-
23Elements in the same group have same number of
valence electrons and similar properties
1 valence e-
3 valence e-
2 valence e-
4 valence e-
24- A period consists of the elements in a horizontal
row
25Periods are numbered 1-7 and each new row begins
a new energy level
26- The elements in the middle are called transition
elements
27The others are main group elements
28- Lithium is the first element in Group 1 and in
Period 2. Check this location on the periodic
table.
29- 4 groups have commonly used names alkali metals
in Group 1 (IA)
30- the alkaline earth metals in Group 2 (IIA)
31- the halogens in Group 17 (VIIA) -from the Greek
words for salt former , compounds that halogens
form with metals are salt-like.
32the noble gases in Group 18 (VIIIA) full outer
shell (8 valence electrons), generally unreactive
33- In the periodic table, two series of elements are
placed below the main body of the table.
The elements in these two series are known as the
inner transition elements.
34- The first series of inner transition elements is
called the lanthanides because they follow
element number 57, lanthanum.
- Because of their natural abundance on Earth is
less than 0.01 percent, the lanthanides are
sometimes called the rare earth elements.
35- The second series of inner transition elements
are the actinides
- All of the actinides are radioactive, and all
beyond uranium (92) are man made (synthetic).
36- Elemental Funkiness
- By Mark Rosengarten UF
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v1PSzSTilu_s
37- Classification of elements
38- Elements are classified as metals, metalloids, or
nonmetals on the basis of their physical and
chemical properties.
- The majority of the elements are metals (solids).
They occupy the entire left side and center of
the periodic table.
39Physical States and Classes of the Elements
- Nonmetals occupy the upper-right-hand corner.
green, yellow, orange
40Physical States and Classes of the Elements
- Metalloids are located along the staircase
boundary between metals and nonmetals. - purple
41Metals
- Metals are elements that have luster, conduct
heat and electricity, and usually bend without
breaking.
- All metals except mercury are solids at room
temperature in fact, most have extremely high
melting points.
Click box to view movie clip.
42Metals
- With the exception of tin, lead, and bismuth,
metals have one, two, or three valence electrons.
- The periodic table shows that most of the metals
(coded blue) are not main group elements.
43Nonmetals
- Most nonmetals dont conduct electricity, are
much poorer conductors of heat than metals, and
are brittle when solid.
- Their melting points tend to be lower than those
of metals.
- Many are gases at room temperature
44- With the exception of carbon, nonmetals have
five, six, seven, or eight valence electrons.
45Properties of Metals and Nonmetals
46Metalloids
- Metalloids have some chemical and physical
properties of metals and other properties of
nonmetals. - purple
- In the periodic table, the metalloids lie along
the border between metals and nonmetals.
47some metalloids are semiconductors
- A semiconductor is an element that does not
conduct electricity as well as a metal, but does
conduct slightly better than a nonmetal.
- Some metalloids such as silicon, germanium (Ge),
and arsenic (As) are semiconductors.
- Silicons semiconducting properties made the
computer revolution possible.
48Part II - Periodic Trends
49Periodic Properties of the Elements
- The electron structure of an atom determines many
of its chemical and physical properties.
- Understanding the relationship between electron
configuration and position in the periodic table
enables you to predict the properties of the
elements and the outcome of many chemical
reactions.
50- Atomic Radius
- size of atom
51Atomic Size
- size of an atom INCREASES in any group as you go
DOWN the column because the valence electrons are
in energy levels farther from the nucleus.
52- shielding effect electrons in energy levels
closer to the nucleus shield the valance
electrons from the positive pull of the nucleus
53- The shielding effect
- Increases down a group because electrons are
being added to higher energy levels - There is no shielding effect as you go across a
period because electrons are being added to the
same principal energy level
54- size of an atom DECREASES in any period as you
go to the RIGHT in any row because there is an
increased nuclear () charge pulling e- in
tighter.
55Atomic Radius
- Why larger going down?
- Higher energy levels have larger orbitals
- Shielding - core e- block the attraction between
the nucleus and the valence e- - Why smaller to the right?
- Increased nuclear charge without additional
shielding pulls e- in tighter
56Atomic Radii of Main Group Elements
57Examples
- Which atom has the larger radius?
Ba Ca
58For each of the following pairs, predict which
atom is larger.
a. Mg, Sr
Sr
b. Sr, Sn
Sr
c. Ge, Sn
Sn
d. Ge, Br
Ge
e. Cr, W
W
59- Octet Rule
- reactivity of atoms is based on achieving a
complete octet of valence electrons(8/8) - Everybody wants to be like a noble gas!
60Atoms achieve noble gas configuration by gaining
or losing their valence electronsAn ion is an
atom or group of atoms that has a charge because
of the loss or gain of electrons.
61cation - An ion that has LOST an e- and now has a
positive () chargeanion an ion that has
GAINED an e- and now has a negative (-) charge
62Common Ion Charges aka oxidation number
1
0
1-
3
3-
2-
2
63- GROUP VALENCE WHEN FORMING IONS
- OUT OF 8
- Group IA 1 loses 1
- Group IIA 2 loses 2
- Group IIIA 3 loses 3
- Group IVA 4 can lose or gain
- Group VA 5 gains 3
- Group VIA 6 gains 2
- Group VIIA 7 gains 1
- Group VIIIA 8 does not form ions
64Ionic Size
- positive ions (cations) acquire the
configuration of the noble gas in the preceding
period.
- the outermost electrons of the ion are in a lower
energy level than the valence electrons of the
neutral atom.
65- The electrons that are not lost by the atom
experience a greater attraction to the nucleus
and pull together in a tighter bundle with a
smaller radius.
- all cations ions have smaller radii than their
corresponding atoms.
66- anions acquire the electron configuration of the
noble gas at the end of its period.
- But the nuclear charge doesnt increase with the
number of electrons.
67- In the case of fluorine, a nuclear charge of 9
must hold ten electrons in the F ion all the
electrons are held less tightly
- the radius of the anion is larger than the
neutral atom.
68Ionic Radius
- Cations ()
- lose e-
- smaller
69Examples
- Which particle has the larger radius?
S2- Al
70For each of the following pairs, predict which
atom or ion is larger
a. Mg, Mg2
Mg
b. S, S2
S2
c. Ca2, Ba2
Ba2
d. Cl, I
I
e. Na, Al3
Na
71- ionization energy - the energy needed to REMOVE
an electron from an atom, in kJ/mol
- First Ionization Energy
- Energy required to remove the 1st e- from a
neutral atom.
72- group trends
- (first) ionization energy decreases from top to
bottom along a group - reason outermost electron is farther and farther
from the nucleus in larger atoms, so it is more
easily removed
73- periodic trends
- (first) ionization energy increases from left to
right in a period - reason ?nuclear charge() increases more
attraction between electrons and protons
74- Successive Ionization Energies
- Large jump in I.E. occurs when a CORE e- is
removed.
- Mg 1st I.E. 736 kJ
- 2nd I.E. 1,445 kJ
- Core e- 3rd I.E. 7,730 kJ
75- Successive Ionization Energies
- Large jump in I.E. occurs when a CORE e- is
removed.
- Al 1st I.E. 577 kJ
- 2nd I.E. 1,815 kJ
- 3rd I.E. 2,740 kJ
- Core e- 4th I.E. 11,600 kJ
76Examples
- Which atom has the higher 1st I.E.?
N Ne
77For each of the following pairs, predict which
atom has the higher first ionization energy.
a. Mg, Na
Mg
O
b. S, O
c. Ca, Ba
Ca
Cl
d. Cl, I
e. Na, Al
Al
f. Se, Br
Br
78Periodic Trends in Electronegativity
- electronegativity tendency of an atom to attract
electrons. - noble gases do not have electronegativity values
- chemical bonds are determined by
electronegativity differences between the bonding
partners
79- electronegativity trends are not completely
regular - fluorine most electronegative element with a
value of 4.0 (smallest anion formed) - cesium least electronegative element (largest
cation formed)
80- electronegativity decreases from top to bottom in
a group
81- electronegativity increases from left to right in
a period
82RECAP
83 Atomic Radius
- Increases to the LEFT and DOWN
84- Increases UP and to the RIGHT
85- Increases UP and to the RIGHT
86- Increases UP and to the RIGHT
87Part 3 Electron Configuration
88Electrons in Atoms
- Niels Bohr.
- Electrons are arranged in orbits around the
nucleus - The energy level of an electron is the region
around the - nucleus where the
- electron is likely to
- be moving.
89modern 3-D electron-cloud model - probability
model
- Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle it is not
possible to know both the exact position and
velocity of an object simultaneously
90Modern electron cloud model
- orbitals are areas of high probability (95) of
finding electrons
91- Electrons can change energy level, by absorbing
energy. When an electron absorbs a quantum of
energy, it moves up to a higher energy level. - When the electron falls from a higher energy
level to a lower energy level, energy is
released, and we see light
92- Energy levels have sublevels divisions within
an energy level - 1) many similar energy states grouped together in
a level - 2) different shapes spherical, dumbbell,
cloverleaf
93- There are 4 sublevels
- s, p, d, f
- (s p d f stand for sharp, principal, diffuse,
fundamental) - maximum number of e- in a principal
- energy level 2n 2
- n principal quantum number
- electron energy level or ? shell (period)
number - n 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
94- electron maximums in the sublevels
- s can hold 2 e-
- p can hold 6 e-
- d can hold 10 e-
- f can hold 14 e-
95- Electrons fill orbitals in a certain way
- electron configuration - a specific electron
arrangement in orbitals
96Electron configurationGeneral Rules
- Pauli Exclusion Principle
- Each orbital can hold 2 electrons with opposite
spins.
97- Aufbau Principle
- Electrons fill the lowest energy orbitals
first. - Lazy Tenant Rule
98- Hunds Rule
- Within a sublevel, place one e- per orbital
before pairing them. - Empty Bus Seat Rule
WRONG
RIGHT
99Different sections of the periodic table
correspond to the different sublevels Groups IA
IIA s block Groups IIIA VIIIA p
block Transition d block Inner transition f
block
100(No Transcript)
101Diagonal rule -to help us remember the order in
which energy level subshells fill - follow the
arrows
- 1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 3d 4s 4p 4d 4f 5s 5p 5d 5f
6s 6p 6d 6f7s 7p
102Example
O 8e-
1 s2 2s2 2p4
1031s2 2s2 2p4
- the sum of the superscripts the atomic number
of the element - superscripts are NOT exponents (nothing is being
squared, etc.)
104- valence configurations will be
- s OR s and p
105- Condensed (Abbreviated) Electron Configurations
- use the previous Noble Gas as the starting point
in brackets, then finish the configuration
1s2
2s2
2p6
3s2
3p4
S 16e-
S 16e- Ne 3s2 3p4
106- Example Indium 49
- 1) complete 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2
5p1 - 2) condensed Kr 5s2 5p1
- 3) valence 5s2 5p1
107- I Heart Electron Configuration
- by Mark Rosengarten UF
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vVb6kAxwSWgU
108