1 / 16

The Periodic Table

Explore the early thoughts and contributions of scientists such as Dobereiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, and Moseley to the development of the periodic table. Learn about the periodic law, groups, periods, valence electrons, atomic radius, ion size, ionization energy, electron affinity, and electronegativity trends.

imyers
Télécharger la présentation

The Periodic Table

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Periodic Table

  2. Early Thoughts • Dobereiner – arranged elements with similar chemical properties into triads. • Newlands- arranged elements by increasing atomic mass. Came up with groups of 8 called them octaves.

  3. Early Thoughts • Mendeleev – Arranged elements by atomic mass • Moseley - discovered each element had a unique positive charge in the nucleus – Atomic number.

  4. Periodic Law • Periodic Law – When elements are arranged in order of increasing atomic numbers, their physical and chemical properties show a periodic pattern.

  5. Terms • Groups or families – the vertical columns on the periodic table • Periods – The horizontal rows of the periodic table • Valence Electrons – electrons in the highest principal energy level.

  6. General Trends • Periodic Trends-Allow us to see the relationships between the elements and their position on the periodic table • Down a family – more energy levels, more electron shielding. • Across a period – same energy level, more protons. Makes the positive nuclear charge greater

  7. Atomic Radius • Atomic Radii- the size from the center of the atom to the outer edge. • Period (across the table)-As you go across the table, the atomic radius DECREASES • Group- As you go down the table, the atomic radius INCREASES. • The largest atomic Radius is Fr

  8. Ion Size Ion- an atom that has gained or lost one or more electrons • “+” ions are smaller than their corresponding atoms • “-“ ions are larger than their corresponding atoms • Elements in a group form ions of the same charge • Metals form “+” ions, • Nonmetals form “-“ ions

  9. Ionization energy • Ionization Energy-Tells us how much energy is required to remove one electron from an atom. (measured in joules/mole) • A + energy → A+ + e- • Period-Increase across the period. • Group- decreases as you go down the group.

  10. Removing multiple electrons. • Example, Boron [He] 2s22p1 • IE1 801, IE2 2427, IE3 3660, IE4 25026, IE5 32827 • Where is the big jump in energy and why? • You lose all the valence electrons and are removing core electrons after IE3 • What has the lowest ionization energy Cs

  11. Electron Affinity-The energy change that occurs when an electron is acquired by a neutral atom Most atoms give off energy when an electron is gained

  12. Electron Affinity trends • Period Trends- as you move across the period, the electron affinity increases until you reach the halogens. • Group Trends-As you move down a group, the electron affinity decreases. • Metals have a low E.A. • Nonmetals have a high E.A.

  13. Exothermic vs. endothermic • F + e- → F- -328KJ/Mole • Exothermic • Some atoms gain an electron by putting energy into the system. • Mg + e- → Mg- +19KJ/Mole • Endothermic • The second type of reaction is very unstable and return to their original state spontaneously. These are usually the noble gases.

  14. Electronegativity • Electronegativity- the ability of an atom in a molecule to attract electrons to itself • Period trend- increases across the period. The metals tend to give electrons away rather than attract them. • Group Trend- decreases or stays about the same • Noble gases aren't electronegative • F is the most electronegative element.

More Related