Title: Chapter Three
1Chapter Three
- Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table
2Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Recall our understanding of an element.
- Element is matter that ______ be broken down into
a simpler substance by ________ or _________
means. - Recall our understanding of an atom.
- Atom is the ________ particle of an element that
can exist and still have the properties of the
element.
3Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Now we will discuss ATOMIC STRUCTURE and
Sub-Atomic Particles - An atom is composed of a _______ and an area
called the electron _____ - The nucleus is very small compared to the size of
the atom - The nucleus contains the _______ () and the
_______ - The __________ (-) are constantly moving around
in the electron cloud - In a neutral atom, the number of electrons (-) is
_______ to the number of protons ()
4Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Fig. 3.1 Nuclear Model of the Atom
- The protons and neutrons of an atom are found in
the central nuclear region, or nucleus, and the
electrons are found in an electron cloud outside
the nucleus.
5Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
Electron Proton Neutron
Charge -1 1 0
Actual Mass (g) 9.109 X 10-28 1.673 X 10-24 1.675 X 10-24
Relative Mass e 1 mass unit 1 1837 1839
6Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
Charge number of protons number of electrons
Mass number number of protons number of
neutrons
Q
A
X
Z
Atomic number number of protons
7Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- _________ Atomic Number Z
- Atoms have no charge,
- __________ __________ Z
- Neutrons ______ Number (A) - _________ (Z)
8Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Electrons are arranged around the nucleus of an
atom - Electrons can be _____ to, _______ from or
_______ with other atoms - When lost or gained, atoms become _______ (ions)
- Lost electrons result in _____charged ion,
________ - Gained electrons result in _____ charged ion,
_____ - Protons in nucleus ________ changes, _________
arrangement determine chemical properties
9Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Atomic Symbol vs Periodic Table
20 Ca 40.08
2
40
Ca
20
10Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- How many electrons, neutrons, and protons are in
the following particles?
protons electrons neutrons
40Ca
40Ca2
14C
12C
11Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Protons remains constant
- Neutrons can vary
- Mass numbers of atoms of same element will vary
depending on the neutrons in the nucleus - Atoms that differ in neutrons are called
Isotopes
12Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Most elements have naturally occurring __________
- Number of isotopes can range from two to ten
- Example Silicon, Si exists in three isotopic
forms - All Si atoms have 14 protons and 14 electrons
- Most, 92.21 contain 14 neutrons
- Some, 4.70 contain 15 neutrons
- Some, 3.09 contain 16 neutrons
13Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- They have the following notations
-
29
28
30
Si
Si
Si
14
14
14
14Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- The additional neutrons in the nucleus may have
very slight effects on the chemical properties of
the element, and some measurable effects on some
physical properties such as melting points,
boiling points and Densities. See Chemical
Connections on pg 55 in text.
15Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- The atomic mass is expressed in atomic mass units
- amu
- atomic mass unit
- Defined as 1/12th the mass of 12C
- 1 amu the mass of 1 proton or 1 neutron
- The atomic mass that is found on the periodic
table or used for calculations is a weighted
average of the atomic masses for the isotopes
16Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- To get the average mass of an element, you must
add together the mass contributions of each
different isotope - abundance x isotopic mass mass contribution
- Calculate the average atomic mass of Chlorine if
75.53 of the atoms are 35Cl (34.97 amu) and
24.47 of the atoms are 37Cl (36.97 amu). - (0.7553 x 34.97 amu) (0.2447 x 36.97 amu)
-
- 35.46 amu
17Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
18Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Table 3.2
- Isotopic Data for Elements with Atomic Numbers
1 through 12
19Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Early 1800s, scientists searched for some order
in the chemical information known at that time - Certain elements had properties that were very
similar to those of other elements - Method or Arrangement was sought that would be
consistent with this information
20Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- John Newlands (1865)
- Arranged elements in order of increasing atomic
mass - When he did this, he noticed that there were
chemical and physical properties that repeated
every eight elements - law of octaves
21Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Fig. 3.2
- Mendeleev constructed a periodic table as part
of his effort to systemize chemistry.
Edgar Fahs Smith Collection, University of
Pennsylvania Library
22Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Dmitri Mendeleev and Julius Lothar Meyer
independently proposed ideas or relationships
regarding the periodicity of __________ and
increasing atomic ________ or atomic _________. - Modern Periodic Law states that when elements are
arranged in order of increasing atomic number,
elements with similar chemical properties occur
at periodic or regularly recurring intervals.
23Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table
- CO 3.1
- Music consists of a series of tones that build
octave after octave. Similarly, elements have
properties that recur period after period.
Novastock/PhotoEdit
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25Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Elements with similar chemical properties are
positioned in _________ ___________ - These _________ _________ are called ________
- The ____________ ______ of elements are called
____________ - Note the _________ are numbered sequentially 1-7
- The ________ are identified by two notations,
using Roman numerals and letters, or numbered
sequentially 1-18
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28Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Also note that Element 72 follows Element 57, as
does Element 104 follows Element 89 - The missing elements 58 through 71 and 90 through
103 are located in two rows at the bottom of the
periodic table. - Positioned here for convenience.
- See the periodic table in the next slide with
these rows positioned where they should be
located.
29Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Fig. 3.4
- In this periodic table, elements 58 through 71
and 90 through 103 are shown in their proper
positions.
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31Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Common Names for some Groups
- Group IA Alkali Metals, excluding H
- Soft, shiny and readily react with water
- Group IIA Alkaline earth metals
- Soft, shiny and moderately reactive toward water
- Group VIIA Halogens
- Reactive, colored, gases at or slightly above
room temperatures - Group VIII Nobel Gases
- Generally unreactive, that undergo few, if any,
chemical reactions
32Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
33Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
Fig. 3.5
- Some familiar metals are aluminum, lead, tin, and
zinc.
(b) Some familiar nonmetals are sulfur,
phosphorus, and bromine.
34Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Fig. 3.6
- This portion of the periodic table shows the
dividing line between metals and nonmetals.
35Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Electrons are arranged around the nucleus of an
atom - Electrons can be lost to, gained from or shared
with other atoms - When lost or gained, atoms become charged (ions)
- Lost electrons result in charged ion, cation
- Gained electrons result in charged ion, anion
- Inference Electrons are special and we will
learn are related to the chemical properties of
an element
36Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- The space outside the nucleus in an atom is
called the ___________ ____________ - The _________ ________ is subdivided into
different ___________ (positioned according to
energy each electron possesses - Shells are subdivided into ____________
- Subshells are subdivided into __________
- Each orbital contains _____ electrons
37Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Electron Shell
- A region of space about a nucleus that contains
electrons that have approximately the same energy
and that spend most of their time approximately
the same distance from the nucleus - 1st shell
- Can contain up to 2 electrons
- 2nd shell
- Can contain up to 8 electrons
- 3rd shell
- Can contain up to 18 electrons
- 4th shell
- Can contain up to 32 electrons
- Any shell can contain up to 2n2 electrons, where
n is the shell number
38Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Subshell
- A region of space within an electron shell that
contains electrons that have the same __________ - Four different kinds of subshells s, p, d, and
f - Shell 1 contains s subshell
- Shell 2 contains s and p subshells
- Shell 3 contains s, p, and d subshells
- Shell 4 contains s, p, d, and f subshells
39Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Fig. 3.7
- The number of subshells within a shell is equal
to the shell number.
40Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Orbital
- Region of space where two electrons are found
- Have different shapes depending on which subshell
they are in (shape of region of space not
electrons) - There are a different number of orbitals in each
kind of subshell - In an s subshell, there is 1 orbital
- In a p subshell, there are 3 orbitals
- In a d subshell, there are 5 orbitals
- In a f subshell, there are 7 orbitals
41Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Fig. 3.8
- An s orbital has spherical shape a p orbital
has two lobes a d orbital has four lobes and an
f orbital has eight lobes.
42Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Fig. 3.9
- Orbitals within a subshell differ mainly in
orientation.
43Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- There are ____ electrons in each ________
- The electrons move around in the __________
- One of the electrons spins __________
- One of the electrons spins ______________________
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45Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Electron configurations tells us in which
subshells the electrons for an element are
located. - Three rules
- 1. Electrons fill orbitals starting with lowest
energy first - 2. There can be no more than 2 electrons in any
orbital, and those electrons must have different
spins - 3. For orbitals in the same subshell, electrons
fill each orbital singly before any orbital gets
a second electron
46Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Fig. 3.10
- The order of filling various electron subshells.
Subshells of different shells overlap. - How will you remember the order?
47Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Fig. 3.11
- The order of filling various electron subshells
with electrons follows the same order given by
the arrows in this diagram.
48Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Writing Electronic Configurations
- H 1s1 He 1s2
- Li 1s2, 2s1 Ne 1s2, 2s2, 2p6
- Na 1s2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s1 Ar 1s2, 2s2, 2p6,
3s2, 3p6 - K 1s2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s2, 3p6, 4s1
- K Ar 4s1
- Kr 1s2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s2, 3p6, 4s2, 3d10, 4p6
- Kr Ar 4s2, 3d10, 4p6
-
49Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Electronic Configurations of Transition Elements
- Fe 1s2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s2, 3p6, 4s2, 3d6
- Br 1s2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s2, 3p6, 4s2, 3d10, 4p5
- Pb 1s2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s2, 3p6, 4s2, 3d10, 4p6, 5s2,
4d10, - 5p6, 6s2, 4f14, 5d10, 6p2
50Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Which of the following electron configurations is
correct for - A)
- B)
- C)
- D)
- E)
51Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Give the symbol of the element that has
- A. Ar4s2 3d6
- B. Four 3p electrons
- C. Two electrons in the 4d sublevel
- D. The element that has the electron
configuration - 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d2
- 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d4
52Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Drawing Orbital Diagrams
- First, write out the electron configuration
- Start drawing the orbital diagram
- --1 orbital (blanks) for every s subshell
- --3 orbitals(blanks) for every p subshell
- --5 orbitals (blanks) for every d subshell
- Blanks are circles or squares
53Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Orbital Diagrams
- Li
- Na
- Na1
??
?
1s2 2s1 2p 3s
3p
??
??
??
??
??
?
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s1
3p
??
??
??
??
??
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s
3p
54Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
??
??
?
?
?
1s2 2s2 2p3 3s
3p
??
??
??
?
?
1s2 2s2 2p4 3s
3p
??
??
??
??
??
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s
3p
55Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- CC 3.3
- The different colors of fireworks result when
heat excites the electrons of different kinds of
metal atoms.
William S. Helsel/Getty Images
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57Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Electron Configuration and the Periodic Law
- We said that elements in the same group have
similar chemical reactivities - Electrons are the subatomic particles involved in
chemical reactions - Which electrons are most likely to be involved in
chemical reactions? - A) those nearest to the nucleus
- B) those farthest from the nucleus
- C) all are equally likely to be involved
58Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- What differentiates one family from another?
- Lets look at the electron configurations
(valance electron configurations) of the alkali
metals to find out. - Li
- Na
- K
- Rb
- Cs
- Fr
59Atomic Structure and the Periodic Table contd
- Elements with similar properties have the same
type of distinguishing electron! (_________
electrons) - The last electron added to the electron
configuration for an element when electron
subshells are filled in order of increasing
energy - It is also the one that causes an elements
electron configuration to differ from that of the
element immediately preceding it in the periodic
table
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