Reading the Periodic Table - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Reading the Periodic Table

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Reading the Periodic Table A way of organizing & classifying elements Arranged in rows and columns Columns The vertical (up and down) columns of the periodic table ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reading the Periodic Table


1
Reading the Periodic Table
2
A way of organizing classifying elements
  • Arranged in rows and columns

3
Columns
  • The vertical (up and down) columns of the
    periodic table (there are 18) are called groups
    or families.
  • Elements in the same group or family have similar
    characteristics or properties.

4
Rows
  • The horizontal rows of the periodic table are
    called periods.
  • Elements in a period are not alike in properties.
  • The first element in a period is usually an
    active solid, and the last element in a period is
    always an inactive gas.

5
Rows
  • Atomic size (number of protons) decreases from
    left to right across a period.
  • Atomic mass (number of protons) increases from
    left to right across a period.

6
Rows
  • Metals are on the left
  • Non-metals are on the right

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10
ALKALI METALS
  • very reactive metals that do not occur freely in
    nature
  • malleable, ductile, good conductors of heat and
    electricity.
  • softer than most other metals
  • can explode if they are exposed to water

11
ALKLINE EARTH METALS
  • metals
  • very reactive
  • not found free in nature

12
TRANSITION METALS
  • ductile and malleable, and conduct electricity
    and heat
  • iron, cobalt, and nickel, are the only elements
    known to produce a magnetic field.

13
RARE EARTH ELEMENTS
  • many are man-made

14
OTHER METALS
  • are ductile and malleable
  • are solid, have a relatively high density, and
    are opaque

15
METALLOIDS
  • have properties of both metals and non-metals
  • some of the metalloids, such as silicon and
    germanium, are semi-conductors. This means that
    they can carry an electrical charge under special
    conditions. This property makes metalloids useful
    in computers and calculators

16
NON-METALS
  • not able to conduct electricity or heat very well
  • very brittle, and cannot be rolled into wires or
    pounded into sheets
  • exist in two of the three states of matter at
    room temperature gases (such as oxygen) and
    solids (such as carbon).
  • have no metallic luster, and do not reflect
    light.

17
HALOGENS
  • "halogen" means "salt-former" and compounds
    containing halogens are called "salts"
  • exist in all three states of matter
  • Solid- Iodine, Astatine
  • Liquid- Bromine
  • Gas- Fluorine, Chlorine

18
NOBLE GASES
  • do not form compounds easily
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