Title: Chemistry Chapter 5
1Chemistry Chapter 5
2Mendeleevs Periodic Table
Dmitri Mendeleev
3Mendeleev organized periodic table
- Vertical columns in atomic mass order
- Made some exceptions to place elements in rows
with similar properties (Te and I) - Horizontal rows have similar chemical properties
- Gaps for yet to be discovered elements
- Left questions why didnt some elements fit in
order of increasing mass? Why did some elements
exhibit periodic behavior?
4Moseley
- Discovered that periodic table was in atomic
number order, not atomic mass order - Explained the Te-I anomaly
5Periodic Law
- Physical and chemical properties of the elements
are periodic functions of their atomic numbers
6Modern Periodic Table
- Discovery of noble gases yields new family (Group
18 aka inert gases) - Lanthanides (58 - 71)
- Actinides (90 103)
7Periods and Blocks of the Periodic Table
- Periods horizontal rows
- Groups/Families vertical columns these
elements share similar chemical properties (they
have the same number of valence electrons) - Blocks periodic table can be broken into blocks
corresponding to s, p, d, f sublevels
8Orbital filling table
9Blocks and Groups s block
- Group1 The alkali metals
- One s electron in outer shell
- Soft, silvery metals of low density and low
melting points - Highly reactive, never found pure in nature
10Blocks and Groups s block
- Group 2 Alkaline Earth Metals
- 2 s electrons in outer shell
- Denser, harder, stronger, less reactive than
Group 1 - Too reactive to be found pure in nature
11Periodic Table with Group Names
12The Properties of a Group the Alkali Metals
- Easily lose valence electron
- (Reducing agents)
- React violently with water
- React with halogens to form salts
13Blocks and Groups d block
- Groups 3 -12
- Metals with typical metallic properties
- Referred to as transition metals
- Group number sum of outermost s and d electrons
14Properties of Metals
- Metals are good conductors of heat and
electricity - Metals are malleable
- Metals are ductile
- Metals have high tensile strength
- Metals have luster
15Examples of Metals
Potassium, K reacts with water and must be stored
in kerosene
Copper, Cu, is a relatively soft metal, and a
very good electrical conductor.
Zinc, Zn, is more stable than potassium
Mercury, Hg, is the only metal that exists as a
liquid at room temperature
16Blocks and Groups p block
- Groups 13-18
- Properties vary greatly metals, metalloids, and
nonmetals - Group 17 halogens are most reactive of non
metals - Group 18 noble gases are NOT reactive
17Properties of Nonmetals
Carbon, the graphite in pencil lead is a great
example of a nonmetallic element.
- Nonmetals are poor conductors of heat and
- electricity
- Nonmetals tend to be brittle
- Many nonmetals are gases at room temperature
18Examples of Nonmetals
Microspheres of phosphorus, P, a reactive
nonmetal
Sulfur, S, was once known as brimstone
Graphite is not the only pure form of carbon, C.
Diamond is also carbon the color comes from
impurities caught within the crystal structure
19Properties of Metalloids
Metalloids straddle the border between metals and
nonmetals on the periodic table.
- They have properties of both metals and
nonmetals. - Metalloids are more brittle than metals, less
brittle than most nonmetallic solids - Metalloids are semiconductors of electricity
- Some metalloids possess metallic luster
20Silicon, Si A Metalloid
- Silicon has metallic luster
- Silicon is brittle like a nonmetal
- Silicon is a semiconductor of electricity
Other metalloids include
- Boron, B
- Germanium, Ge
- Arsenic, As
- Antimony, Sb
- Tellurium, Te
21Blocks and Groups f block
- Lanthanides shiny metals similar to group 2
- Actindes all are radioactive plutonium
lawrencium are man-made
22Determination of Atomic Radius
Half of the distance between nucli in covalently
bonded diatomic molecule
"covalent atomic radii"
Periodic Trends in Atomic Radius
- Radius decreases across a period
Increased effective nuclear charge due to
decreased shielding
- Radius increases down a group
Addition of principal quantum levels
23Table of Atomic Radii
24 Ionization Energy - the energy required to
remove an electron from an atom
- Increases for successive electrons taken from
- the same atom
- Tends to increase across a period
Electrons in the same quantum level do not
shield as effectively as electrons in inner
levels
Irregularities at half filled and filled
sublevels due to extra repulsion of
electrons paired in orbitals, making them
easier to remove
- Tends to decrease down a group
Outer electrons are farther from the nucleus
25Ionization of Magnesium
Mg 738 kJ ? Mg e-
Mg 1451 kJ ? Mg2 e-
Mg2 7733 kJ ? Mg3 e-
26Table of 1st Ionization Energies
27Another Way to Look at Ionization Energy
28Ionic Radii
Cations
- Smaller than the corresponding
- atom
Anions
- Larger than the corresponding
- atom
29Table of Ion Sizes
30Electronegativity
A measure of the ability of an atom in a
chemical compound to attract electrons
- Electronegativities tend to increase across
- a period
- more nuclear charge, more power to
attract electrons
- Electronegativities tend to decrease down a
group or remain the same - additional energy levels result in less
attraction to the nucleus
31Periodic Table of Electronegativities