Chapter 6 The Periodic Table
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Transcript Chapter 6 The Periodic Table
Chapter 6
The Periodic Table
THE HOW AND WHY
Chemistry
Tracy Bonza
Sequoyah High School
Adapted from Mr. Green at tvgreen.com
HOW--History
• Antoine Lavoisier-made a
list of 23 known elements
• John Newlands noticed
when arranged by
increasing mass their
properties repeated every
8 elements—called
periodic.
History
• Russian
scientist
Dmitri
Mendeleev
taught
chemistry in
terms of
properties.
Mendeleev’s Table
• Grouped elements in columns
by similar properties in order
of increasing atomic mass.
Found some inconsistencies felt that the properties were
more important than the
mass, so switched order.
Mendeleev’s Table
• Found some gaps.
• Must be undiscovered
elements.
• Predicted their properties
before they were found.
Mendeleev’s
Periodic Table
Henry Mosley 1913
• Discovered that each
element has a different
number of protons.
• Put elements in order
of increasing number
of protons (atomic
number) instead of
atomic mass
The modern table
•Order is in increasing
atomic number.
•Elements are still
grouped by properties.
•Similar properties are in
the same column.
The modern table
• Added a column of
elements Mendeleev
didn’t know about.
• The noble gases weren’t
found because they didn’t
react with anything.
• Horizontal rows are
called periods
• There are 7 periods
• Vertical columns are called
groups.
• Elements are placed in
columns by similar properties.
• Also called families
• The elements in the A
groups are called the
representative elements
1A
2A
3A 4A5A 6A7A
8A
0
The group B are
called the transition
elements
These
are called the inner
transition elements and they
belong here
• Group 1A are the alkali
metals
• Group 2A are the
alkaline earth metals
• Group 7A is called the Halogens
• Group 8A are the noble gases
Periodic Law
• There is a periodic
repetition of chemical
and physical properties of
the elements when they
are arranged by
increasing atomic
number
Periodic Law-Why is
it true?
• How did Schrödinger know he
was “on to something”?
• Remember: Schrödinger
created the Quantum
Mechanical Model which
predicted where electrons
would be around the atom.
Periodic Law-Why is it
true?
• Properties of atoms repeat
because of electron
configurations
• Look at Group 1 elements
electron configuration
H
Li
1
3
Na
11
K
19
Rb
37
Cs
55
Fr
87
1s1
1s22s1
1s22s22p63s1
1s22s22p63s23p64s1
1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s1
1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24
d10 5p66s1
1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24
d105p66s24f145d106p67s1
How Many Valence
electrons?
• In Group 1 there is 1
valence electron.
• ATOMS IN THE SAME
GROUP HAVE THE SAME
CHEMICAL PROPERTIES
BECAUSE THEY HAVE THE
SAME NUMBER OF
VALENCE ELECTRONS!!
1s2 He
2
1s22s22p6 Ne
10
1s22s22p63s23p6 Ar
18
1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p6
Kr
36
1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d105p6 Xe
54
1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d10
Rn
6
2
14
10
6
5p 6s 4f 5d 6p
86
s1
S- block
s2
• Alkali metals all end in s1
• Alkaline earth metals all
end in s2
• really have to include He
but it fits better later.
• He has the properties of
the noble gases.
Transition Metals -d
block
d1 d2 d3
s1
d5
s1
d5 d6 d7 d8 d10 d10
The Pblock1
p
p2
p3 p4 p 5
p6
F - block
• inner transition elements
f1 f2 f3 f4 f5 f6 f7 f8 f9 f10 f11 f12 f13 f14
Writing to Win
• RAFT
• Role: Ernest Schrödinger
• Audience: Demitri Mendeleev and
John Mosley
• Format: A Thank You Note
• Topic: Thanks for the hard work
organizing the elements. This is
how my work supports your work.
Atomic Size
• First problem where do you
start measuring.
• The electron cloud doesn’t
have a definite edge.
• They get around this by
measuring more than 1
atom at a time.
Atomic Size
}
Radius
•Atomic Radius = half the distance
between two nuclei of a diatomic
molecule.
Trends in Atomic Size
• Influenced by two factors.
• Energy Level
• Higher energy level is
further away.
• Charge on nucleus
• More charge pulls electrons
in closer.
Group trends
• As we go down
a group
• Each atom has
another energy
level,
• So the atoms
get bigger.
H
Li
Na
K
Rb
Periodic Trends
• As you go across a period the
radius gets smaller.
• Same energy level.
• More nuclear charge.
• Outermost electrons are closer.
Na
Mg
Al
Si
P
S Cl Ar
Rb
K
Atomic Radius (nm)
Overall
Na
Li
Kr
Ar
Ne
H
10
Atomic Number
Ionization Energy
• The amount of energy
required to completely
remove an electron from a
gaseous atom.
• Removing one electron
makes a +1 ion.
• The energy required is called
the first ionization energy.
Ionization Energy
• The second ionization energy
is the energy required to
remove the second electron.
• Always greater than first IE.
• The third IE is the energy
required to remove a third
electron.
• Greater than 1st of 2nd IE.
Symbol First
H
He
Li
Be
B
C
N
O
F
Ne
1312
2731
520
900
800
1086
1402
1314
1681
2080
Second
5247
7297
1757
2430
2352
2857
3391
3375
3963
Third
11
810
14840
3569
4619
4577
5301
6045
6276
Symbol First
H
He
Li
Be
B
C
N
O
F
Ne
1312
2731
520
900
800
1086
1402
1314
1681
2080
Second
5247
7297
1757
2430
2352
2857
3391
3375
3963
Third
11
810
14840
3569
4619
4577
5301
6045
6276
What determines IE
• The greater the nuclear charge
the greater IE.
• Distance from nucleus
decreases IE
• Filled and half filled orbitals
have lower energy, so achieving
them is easier, lower IE.
Group trends
• As you go down a
group first IE
decreases because
• The electron is further
away.
Periodic trends
• All the atoms in the same
period have the same
energy level.
• Increasing nuclear charge
• So IE generally increases
from left to right.
• There are exceptions!
Driving Force
• Full Energy Levels
have very low energy.
• Noble Gases have full
orbitals.
• Atoms behave in ways
to achieve noble gas
configuration.
2nd Ionization Energy
• For elements that reach a
filled or half filled orbital
by removing 2 electrons
2nd IE is lower than
expected.
• Alkali earth metals form
+2 ions.
Electronegativity
Electronegativity
• The tendency for an atom to
attract electrons to itself when it
is chemically combined with
another element.
• How fair it shares.
• Big electronegativity means it
pulls the electron toward it.
Group Trend
• The further down a group
the farther the electron is
away and the more
electrons an atom has.
• More willing to share.
• Low electronegativity.
Periodic Trend
• Metals are at the left end.
• They let their electrons go easily
• Low electronegativity
• At the right end are the
nonmetals.
• They want more electrons.
• Try to take them away.
• High electronegativity.
Ionization energy, electronegativity
INCREASE
Atomic size increases