1 / 44

Chemical Periodicity

Chemical Periodicity. In 1869, Dimitri Mendeleev arranged all of the known elements in order of increasing atomic mass and chemical properties of the atoms. He found a pattern that exists and is repeated, or is periodic , in all the elements. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPnwBITSmgU.

teness
Télécharger la présentation

Chemical Periodicity

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. Chemical Periodicity

  2. In 1869, Dimitri Mendeleev arranged all of the known elements in order of increasing atomic mass and chemical properties of the atoms. He found a pattern that exists and is repeated, or is periodic, in all the elements. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPnwBITSmgU

  3. Henry Moseley’s modern periodic table is arranged in order of increasing atomic number and would look like this ifwe didn’t move the rare earth elements to below

  4. The Periodic Law • The periodic law: When elements are arranged in order of increasing atomic number, there is a periodic repetition of their physical and chemical properties. • The properties of the elements within a period change as you move across a period from left to right. • The pattern of properties within a period repeats as you move from one period to the next.

  5. Searching For an Organizing Principle Chlorine, bromine, and iodine have very similar chemical properties.

  6. IsoelectronicIons with the same electronic configuration as a noble gas are said to be isoelectronic with a noble gas.

  7. The pattern exists because there is a pattern in the valance electrons. • The pattern is… Atoms in the 1st column have 1 valance e- “ 2nd “ 2 valance e- “ 3rd “ 3 valance e- • Valance e- are in the outer orbit • They are responsible for the atoms chemical & physical properties • Atoms are most stable when their outer orbit is either completely full or empty.

  8. Periodic - repeats according to a pattern • Patterns on the p chart are caused by patterns in the e- configurations Group # of e- Highest orbital 1st 1 s 2nd 2 s 3rd 1 p 4th 2 p 5th 3 p 6th 4 p 7th 5 p The atoms in the 8th column have full energy levels (noble gasses) 8th 6 p

  9. The valence e- are responsible for the elements chemical and physical properties • Ex) Li 1s22s1 Na 1s22s22p63s1 K 1s22s22p63s23p64s1 Notice that there is only 1 e- in the outermost orbital (They all have one valence e-) Thus, all elements in a column have similar prop.

  10. Major Regions of the Periodic Table

  11. What’s on the periodic table? Metals Alkali Metals Alkaline Earth Metals Transition Metals Non-metals (To the right of the “zig-zag” line) *polyatomic nonmetal *noble gases *halogens Metaloids Touch the “zig-zag” line

  12. Metals • Left of “zig-zag” line • Metals are… • Shiny luster • Malleable • Ductile • Good conductors • Heat & Electricity • Lose their e- • All of these properties result from loosely held valence electrons in metals

  13. P Metals

  14. Non-metals • Right of the “zig-zag” line • Non-metals are… • Usually gas at room temp. • Brittle • Dull • Poor conductors • Gain e- • Typically gain e-1 • All of these properties result from more tightly held valence electrons in nonmetals

  15. TOP Non-Metals

  16. Metalloids • Touch the line • Solids at room temperature • Sometimes they act like metals, sometimes they act like non-metals - it depends on the conditions such as temp and pressure • Semi-conductors of electricity Silicon

  17. P

  18. Important Families of the Periodic Table

  19. Alkali Metals • The most reactive metals • Never found alone, always in a compound • Like to form + ions b/c they tend to lose 1 e- to become stable • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m55kgyApYrY

  20. Alkaline Earth Metals • Reactive, usually produce a base • Always found in a compound • Like to lose 2 e-

  21. Transition Metals • Properties of metals • Not very reactive

  22. Transition ElementsThe “Group B” elements are displayed in the main body of the periodic table. They have electrons in d sublevels and are all classified as metals.Inner Transition Metals are found within the Transition Metals and contain electrons in f sublevels

  23. Boron Family • Likes to lose 3 e- Carbon Family • Will lose or gain 4 e- Nitrogen Family • Gains 3 e- Oxygen Family • Gains 2 e-

  24. Halogens • Gains 1 e- • Very reactive, used for killing germs • Whenever a metal and a halogen combine, they form a “salt”

  25. Noble Gases • Very unreactive • Their outer orbit is full

  26. Periodic Trends Periodic Trends

  27. Trends on the periodic table: • Atomic radius - size of the atom • Ionization energy - energy required to steal an e- • Electronegativity - tendency for the atom to attract e- when chemically combined with another atom

  28. Summary of Periodic Trends • Atomic Radius: ↓ Increases → Decreases • Ionization energy: ↓ Decreases → Increases • Electronegativity: ↓ Decreases → Increases 2. Ionic Radius: Cation: Radius Decreases Anion: Radius Increases

  29. Atomic radius atomic radius decreases smallest atom atomic radius increases largest atom Which is larger? 1. N or P 2. Al or Si 3. Na or Cs 4. N or O

  30. How is radius determined? Why can’t we just measure the radius of one atom?

  31. Ions • Positive and negative ions form when electrons are transferred between atoms.

  32. Ions • Positive and negative ions form when electrons are transferred between atoms.

  33. Ionic radius: • cations: smaller than their parent atoms • anions: larger than their parent atoms • follows same pattern as atomic radius Which is larger? S or S2– K+1 or K Na+1 or Mg2+ Mg2+ or Ca2+

  34. Trends in Ionization Energy • The energy required to remove an electron from an atom is called ionization energy. • The energy required to remove the first electron from an atom is called the first ionization energy. • The energy required to remove an electron from an ion with a 1+ charge is called the second ionization energy.

  35. Ionization energy: I.E. increases highest I.E. I.E. increases lowest I.E. Which has the higher ionization energy? B or C Zn or Ga Na or K K or Ca Mg or Al B or Al

  36. Trends in Electronegativity • Trends in Electronegativity • Electronegativity is the ability of an atom of an element to attract electrons when the atom is in a compound. • In general, electronegativity values decrease from top to bottom within a group. For representative elements, the values tend to increase from left to right across a period.

  37. Electronegativity: Electro. increases highest electro. Electro. increases lowest electro. Which has the higher electronegativity? B or C Zn or Ga Na or K O or F P or N F or Cl

  38. 6.3 Trends in Electronegativity • Representative Elements in Groups 1A through 7A

More Related