The Periodic Table Chapter 5.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 5 – The Periodic Table
Advertisements

The Periodic Table.
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.
The Periodic Table of Elements
 Russian Chemist Dmitri Mendeleev produced the first periodic table of elements  He arranged them in order of increasing atomic mass and noticed a periodic.
Development of the Modern Periodic Table & Classification of the Elements Sections 6.1 and 6.2.
I. History of the Periodic Table Mendeleev Mosely Periodic Law
U5: The History and Arrangement of the Periodic Table
The Periodic Table and Periodic Law
I. History of the Periodic Table Mendeleev Mosely Periodic Law
Chapter 3 The Periodic Table
Section 1 – Arranging the Elements.  About 63 elements have been identified  No organization to the elements  Several scientists are trying to find.
Navigating the Periodic Table
Organization o 1860’s scientist realized that by listing the known elements in order of increasing _____________, similar elements with similar ____________appeared.
Periodic Table Section 18.3.
Section 4.4—The Periodic Table Objectives Explain how the modern periodic table was developed Describe the key features of the periodic table Explain why.
Modern Periodic Table 5.2.
Chapter 5 The Periodic Table.
The Periodic Table - Organizing Elements. Many elements were unknown when the Periodic Table was first created Many elements were unknown when the Periodic.
ARRANGING THE ELEMENTS
The Modern Periodic Table
Chapter 6 The Periodic Table Ch. 6.1 Organizing the Elements.
ORGANIZING THE PERIODIC TABLE Ch TrueFalseStatementTrueFalse Mendeleev made the periodic table from a deck of cards Periodic elements mass increase.
An Introduction to the Periodic Table Using the Periodic Table An Introduction to the Elements.
Modern Periodic Table.
Ch. 6 Notes-Pre AP Chemistry Periodic Table and Periodic Law John Newlands – when elements arranged by increasing mass, properties repeated every 8 th.
Introduction to the Periodic Table Atomic Number ● Symbol ● Atomic Weight Element ● Compound ● Mixture.
In a video store, the latest movies are usually placed on the shelves in alphabetical order. Older movies are grouped into categories such as Action or.
Organization The elements needed organizing Over 100 different elements.
The Periodic Table An Introduction.
The Periodic Table of Elements- Ch 5
PHYSICAL SCIENCE CHAPTER 5
Chapter 5 Review The Periodic Table.
THE PERIODIC TABLE Chemistry 112. The First Five Minutes… Make a table with five columns In the first column, write the following metals into each space:
The Periodic Table. History of the Periodic Table In the 1860s, scientists had discovered 63 elements Russian scientist Dmitri Mendeleev tried to find.
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.
Class Notes: The Periodic Table. Creation of the Periodic Table Mendeleev: arranged elements based on atomic mass -noticed holes in the table, so he predicted.
Arranging the Elements Chapter 5 Section 1 p Vocabulary 1.periodic 2.periodic table 3.period 4.group.
Ch. 5 - The Periodic Table I. History of the Periodic Table  Mendeleev  Mosely  Periodic Law 1.
Notes: Chemical Periodicity. Dmitiri Mendeleev ( ) The first to relate the known elements in an ordered arrangement according to their chemical.
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…an arrangement of elements according to similarities in properties.
Make sure you know….
Aim: How are Elements Organized in the Periodic Table?
GET ORGANIZED The Periodic Table of Elements.
The Periodic Table.
Modern Periodic Table 5.2.
Chapter 5 The Periodic Table.
Chapter 12 The Periodic Table.
Introduction to the Periodic Table
ATOMIC THEORY AND THE PERIODIC TABLE
Do Now!!! Write two interesting things you learned in last night’s article. Then turn in your Do Now sheet! L. Bernard, 2015.
Chapter 6.1: Organizing the Elements
Modern Periodic Table (Section 5.2)
Blue Physical Science Book pp
Chapter 18, Section 3
The Periodic Table Chapter 12
Periodic Table of Elements
ARRANGING THE ELEMENTS
The Modern Periodic Table
ARRANGING THE ELEMENTS
Aim: How are Elements Organized in the Periodic Table?
The Modern Periodic Table
Modern Periodic Table.
The Periodic Table Physical Science.
Periodic Table History
The Periodic Table.
Unit 4 Read Chapter 5 The Periodic Table.
Electron Configurations
Presentation transcript:

The Periodic Table Chapter 5

Organizing the Elements Chapter 5 Section 1

Antoine Lavoisier 1750- Scientists had only identified 17 elements. 1789 Lavoisier grouped elements into metals, nonmetals, gases and earths. For the next 80 years, scientists looked for different ways to classify the elements.

History of the Periodic Table Mendeleev wanted to organize the elements according to their properties Noticed periodic- repeating patterns of chemical behavior once he organized the elements

History of the Periodic Table Mendeleev arranged the elements into rows in order of increasing mass so that elements with similar properties were in the same column. A periodic table is an arrangement of elements in columns, based on a set of properties that repeat from row to row.

The first Periodic Table of the Elements

Mendeleev’s Prediction He could not make a complete table because some of the elements were not discovered yet. He left gaps in his periodic table, confident that one day new elements would be discovered. He used the properties of elements located near the blank spaces to predict the properties for undiscovered elements.

Evidence supported Mendeleev There was a close match between what Mendeleev predicted and the actual properties of the new elements. This showed how useful his periodic table really was! I LOVE SCIENCE !

The Modern Periodic Table Chapter 5 Section 2

Organization In the modern periodic table, elements are arranged by increasing atomic number.

Periods=rows across the table A. Atomic number increases by one from left to right across a period. B. Each time the outermost electron orbit becomes full, a new period is started. C. Look at Period 1-it only has two elements (hydrogen and helium)

Q: Why is lithium (element #3) located in Period 2? A: The first electron orbit can only hold two electrons. The third electron in lithium must be placed in the second electron shell. Therefore, a new period (row) is started.

Groups= columns down the table All the elements in a group have similar properties. For example, the elements in group 1A are very reactive, whereas, the elements in group 8A are very stable.

Periodic Law: There is a pattern of repeating chemical properties in a group on the periodic table. Elements with similar properties fall in same column or group in the periodic table.

Classes of Elements- Metals Good conductors of electric current and heat Most are malleable and ductile (able to be drawn through a thin wire) Metals have fewer than four electrons on the outermost shell.

Transition Metals Elements that form a bridge between the elements on the left and right sides of the table.

Classes of Elements-Nonmetals Poor conductors of electric current and heat. Many are gases at room temperature Low boiling points Those that are solid tend to be brittle Nonmetals have more than four electrons on the outermost shell (H and He are the exceptions)

Classes of Elements-Metalloids Have properties in between metals and nonmetals Located on staircase between element #5 and element #85

Variation Across a Period Elements become less metallic in their properties as you move from left to right on the periodic table.