The Periodic Table…an arrangement of elements according to similarities in properties.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Periodic Table.
Advertisements

The History and Arrangement of the Periodic Table
Aim: How are Elements Organized in the Periodic Table? DO Now: 1. How would you organize these buttons? 2. How do you think elements are organized in the.
Properties of metals and nonmetals
The Periodic Table Chemistry.
Organization of the Periodic Table Classifying the Elements.
U5: The History and Arrangement of the Periodic Table
The Periodic Table Families. Why is it important to me? Useful because it allows you to determine properties of elements by their location on the table.
Periodic Table of the Elements
The Periodic Table. History of the Periodic Table Solving the Periodic Puzzle  Created by Dmitri Mendeleev in late 1800s  Organized according to increasing.
Periodic Table.
1 This is Jeopardy The Periodic Table 2 Category No. 1 Category No. 2 Category No. 3 Category No. 4 Category No Final Jeopardy.
PERIODIC TABLE ORGANIZATION How is the periodic table organized? What are the properties of each group?
Family or Group – a vertical column on the Periodic Table made up of similar elements.
6.1 PERIODIC TABLE.
The Periodic Table. Organization of the Periodic Table The Periodic Table is organized by _______________, which is the number of ________ in the _________.
Modern Periodic Table 5.2.
Vocabulary Periods Groups Metals Non-metals Metalloids.
Aim: How are Elements Organized in the Periodic Table?
Unit 2: Periodicity & the Periodic Table. I. History A.Dmitri Mendeleev – first person to organize elements based on atomic mass left gaps for elements.
Periodic Table. The First Periodic Table of Elements Discovered by Dmitri Mendeleev Only had 63 naturally occurring elements to work with Organized the.
ORGANIZING THE PERIODIC TABLE Ch TrueFalseStatementTrueFalse Mendeleev made the periodic table from a deck of cards Periodic elements mass increase.
Ch. 6 Notes-Pre AP Chemistry Periodic Table and Periodic Law John Newlands – when elements arranged by increasing mass, properties repeated every 8 th.
Some images are from
The Periodic Table An Introduction.
The Periodic Table. The Father of the Periodic Table— Dmitri Mendeleev Mendeleev ( ) was the first scientist to notice a relationship between.
Periodic Trends. Periodic Table of the Elements What does the staircase line separate?
Periodic Table Miss Sauer’s 7 th Grade Science. Do Now: 1. Write down something you know that has a repeating order. 2. Name a group that you belong to.
Periodic Table Notes. The Periodic Table of Elements  Periodic – Repeated in a pattern.
The Periodic Table. Dmitri Mendeleev ( ) determined the properties of every known element at the time Atomic Mass Density Colour Melting Point.
Periodic Table. first arranged the periodic table arranged them by atomic mass he noticed that they had similar chemical and physical properties but some.
Notes: Chemical Periodicity. Dmitiri Mendeleev ( ) The first to relate the known elements in an ordered arrangement according to their chemical.
 The Periodic Table Essential Question: How is the Periodic Table arranged?
Periodicity Notes Pgs.. Dimitri Mendeleev produced the first useful and widely accepted periodic table Elements were arranged according to increasing.
The Periodic Table and Periodic Law Chapter 6. Section 6.1: Development of the Modern Periodic Table Late 1790’s- Lavoisier compiled a list of 23 elements.
The Periodic Table.
Today’s Agenda (9/30/2016): Notes over the Periodic Table
Aim: How are Elements Organized in the Periodic Table?
Daily Science Write the short hand configurations for the following elements: Molybdenum and Ruthenium Write the number of valence electrons Cobalt Based.
The Periodic Table.
Ch. 3: “Atoms and the Periodic Table”
Modern Periodic Table 5.2.
Periodic Table Def.-A periodic table is a chart of elements arranged into rows and columns according to their physical and chemical properties. Pg 391.
The History and Arrangement of the Periodic Table
Metals Non-Metals.
“The Periodic Table”.
The Periodic Table: Metals, Nonmetals, and Metalloids
Do Now!!! Write two interesting things you learned in last night’s article. Then turn in your Do Now sheet! L. Bernard, 2015.
The Periodic Table Cl 35.5 Br 79.9 I History of the Periodic Table J.W. Dobereiner – elemental triads Elements in a triad have similar properties.
“The Periodic Table2” NOTES #6.
Periodic Table.
5.2 The Modern Periodic Table
Periodic Table.
The Periodic Table of elements.
Understanding the Periodic Table of Elements
The Periodic Table.
Organizing the Elements
The Periodic Table Objectives
Periodic Table Families & Identifying
Periodic Table Families & Identifying
Periodic Table.
Unit 4 Chapter Periodic Table Part 1.
Aim: How are Elements Organized in the Periodic Table?
Ch 10 The Periodic Table.
The Periodic Table.
Parts of the Periodic Table
Ch 10 The Periodic Table.
Electron Configurations
Presentation transcript:

The Periodic Table…an arrangement of elements according to similarities in properties.

Development Dimitri Mendeleev, 1834 - 1907 first periodic table   first periodic table organized elements into columns by increasing atomic mass left blank spaces for undiscovered elements

70 elements had been discovered mid-1800s 70 elements had been discovered  

determined the atomic number of elements Henry Moseley, 1913   created the modern periodic table determined the atomic number of elements used the atomic number instead of atomic mass to organize the periodic table 

Periodic Law When the elements are arranged in order of increasing atomic number, there is a periodic repetition of their physical and chemical properties.

Basic Organization Periods horizontal rows numbered 1 – 7 bottom two rows, inner transition elements

Groups or Families vertical columns similar properties within each group 18 in total

Main Sections Representative elements groups 1, 2, 13 – 18

Transition elements groups 3 – 12 all metals

Inner transition elements bottom two rows lanthanoid series, #57 – 71 actinoid series, #89 – 103 (all are radioactive)

Metals 80% of all elements left side of periodic table (except for hydrogen) 80% of all elements ductile (stretched into wire) AND malleable (flattened into thin sheets) luster all but one solid at room temperature, 20C (Hg only metal liquid at room temp.) good conductors of heat and electricity high densities, high boiling points and melting points

= METALS

Nonmetals right side of periodic table poor conductors of heat and electricity solids and gases at room temp. (Br only liquid at room temp.) not malleable or ductile brittle no luster, dull low densities, low boiling and melting points

= NONMETALS

Metalloids properties between those of metals and nonmetals on stair step line EXCEPT for ALUMINUM, Al (B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te, Po) properties between those of metals and nonmetals all are solids at room temperature

= METALLOIDS

Group Names Group 1 ALKALI Metals most reactive group, react violently with water 1 electron in the outer shell very soft , can be cut with a knife

Group 2 ALKALINE EARTH Metals 2 electrons in outer shell

Group 17 HALOGENS “salt-makers” 7 electrons in outer shell individually poisonous, but in a compound they are harmless

Group 18 NOBLE GASES INERT gases/nonreactive (do not react) with other elements 8 electrons in their outer shell