The Periodic Table Unit 4. I. History A. Dmitir Mendeleev Russian chemist, 19th century Arranged elements by their properties Arranged by increasing atomic.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 6 PERIODIC TABLE.
Advertisements

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.
Periodic Table and Trends
The Periodic Table.
Periodic Table & Trends
The Periodic Table Chapter 5 Notes. Mendeleev ● Designed first periodic table (1869) ● Arranged mostly by increasing atomic mass ● Elements in the same.
Periodic Table Chapter 6.
Chapter 6 Periodic Trends
I. History of the P.T. A.) Dmitri Mendeleev –Russian Chemist who 1st arranged elements in usable manner (1869). –Arranged elements in order of increasing.
Chemistry Chapter 5 The Periodic Law.
Organization of the Periodic Table. Demetry Mendeleev organized the elements in the first periodic table by order of mass in Found repetition in.
Periodic Trends. Groups: vertical columns (1-18) Groups: vertical columns (1-18) Have similar properties because have same number of electrons in outer.
Periodic Table Unit IV. I History A. Mendeleev Arranged elements by their masses Arranged elements by their masses B. Moseley Arranged elements by their.
The Periodic Table.
The Periodic Table Chapter 6 Notes. History of the PT Dobereiner –German Chemist –Proposed “triads” in 1829: grouping of 3 elements with similar properties.
THE PERIODIC TABLE BRIEF HISTORY. Dmitri Mendeleev (1869, Russian) –Organized elements by increasing atomic mass. –Elements with similar properties were.
 Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev placed the known elements in order of increasing atomic mass.  When he did this he noticed that the elements’ properties.
(Honors) Intro to the Table (Honors) Intro to the Table Dan Radcliffe.
Ch. 6 Chemical Periodicity Fall I. Organizing the Elements A. The Periodic Table Revisited 1. Dmitri Mendeleev arranged the elements in
Video 4.1Video 4.1 Introduction and History of the Periodic Table.
Unit 5 The Periodic Table The how and why. Newlands u Arranged known elements according to properties & order of increasing atomic mass u Law of.
Periodic Table of Elements. Bohr Model: and Valence electrons Bohr Model: and Valence electrons
Chapter 5 The Periodic Law
Organization of the Periodic Table
The Periodic Table of the Elements
Review – Periodic Table The modern periodic table is not arranged by increasing atomic mass, but rather increasing atomic number Periodic Law: States that.
The Periodic Table Introduction.
Aim: How are Elements Organized in the Periodic Table?
1 The Periodic Table and Trends of the Elements By Diane Lunaburg 2001.
Periodic Table Chapter 6. Periodic Table Many different versions of the Periodic Table exist All try to arrange the known elements into an organized table.
Periodic Law History of the Periodic Table Periodic Trends.
The Periodic Table J.W. Dobereiner J.W. Dobereiner The elements in the triad has similar chemical properties. The elements in the triad has similar chemical.
Trends in the Periodic Table. Organization Mendeleev: atomic mass but some problems Moseley: atomic number Periodic Law: when elements are arranged with.
UNIT 6: PERIODIC TABLE How has the Periodic Table evolved overtime? How is the Periodic Table arranged? What are properties and locations of metals and.
TEKS 5 – The student understands the historical development of the Periodic Table and can apply its predictive power. (5 A-C) STAAR Chemistry Review Topic:
Unit 2 – Electrons and Periodic Behavior Cartoon courtesy of NearingZero.net.
Periodic Properties Periodic Table with f-block included A.Electron Configurations.
Periodic Properties SPS4a Determine the trends of the following:
JOURNAL 10/26 Which has the largest atomic number? K, Na, or P Which has the largest atomic radius?- Ca, Sr, Ba.
PERIODIC TABLE. Essential Question: What were Mendeleev and Mosley contributions to the development of the periodic table? History: Dmitri Mendeleev (1869)
Unit 4: Periodic Table. Classifying the Elements  Demitri Mendeleev (1869)- Russian Scientist Concluded that physical and chemical properties of elements.
Formation of the Periodic Table Mendeleev: arranged the periodic table in order of increasing atomic MASS (didn’t know about protons) –Started new rows.
Periodic Table. first arranged the periodic table arranged them by atomic mass he noticed that they had similar chemical and physical properties but some.
Find the Missing Alien 1. Study the 17 pictures of aliens. 2. Organize the pictures based on patterns. 3. Identify and draw the missing alien.
The Periodic Table History Structure Trends. Part I: Attempts at Classification.
Periodic Table 1. History of the Periodic Table 3.
Unit 4: The Periodic Table How is the periodic table a useful tool?
Chapter Three: Periodic Table
Getting to know the Periodic Table
Unit 2 The Periodic Table
Periodic Table of Elements
Unit 5 The Periodic Table
Periodic Table & Trends
Periodic Table Chapter 6.
Introduction to The Periodic Table
Unit 3: Periodic Table
Periodic Table.
Chapter 6 Periodic Trends
Periodic Table & Trends
Periodic Table Chapter 6.
Periodic Table.
History Structure Trends
Periodic Properties.
Periodic Table.
UNIT 6: PERIODIC TABLE.
The Periodic Table Objectives
Greatest Cheat-sheet Ever!!!
Periodic Table & Trends
Periodic Table Unit IV.
The Periodic Table Unit 2.
Presentation transcript:

The Periodic Table Unit 4

I. History A. Dmitir Mendeleev Russian chemist, 19th century Arranged elements by their properties Arranged by increasing atomic mass Groups: vertical groups-elements have similar properties Periods : horizontal rows Periodic Law: Properties of the element are a periodic function of their atomic mass O Now arranged by atomic number O Iodine and tellurium were out of order

B. Henry Mosely British physicist ( years of accomplishment) Developed the modern periodic table Used x-rays to determine atomic number

II. Elements Arranged based properties 109 elements-mostly naturally occurring Any element greater than 83 is radioactive

III. Metals, Nonmetals, Metalloids A. Metals (H is NOT a metal) Make up 2/3rds of the periodic table Shiny Solids (not Hg) Malleable Ductile Good conductor of heat and electricity Mobile electrons Tend to lose electrons to become ions

B. Nonmetals Not shiny Gas, liquid, and solids Not malleable or ductile Brittle Poor conductors of heat and electricity Tend to gain electrons to become negative ions

C. Metalloids or semi-metals In between in properties On stairs B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, and, Te

IV. Groups or Families A. Alkali Metals (group 1)  Very active metals, reactivity increases as you go down a group  React violently with water  Always found in compound

B. Alkaline Earth Metals (group 2)  Active but not as much as group 1  Reactivity of metals increases as you go down a group

C. Transition Metals (group 3-12) Can lose 1-3 electrons to become ions Multiple oxidation states High melting points O Hard solid at Standard Temperature and Pressure (STP: 0 C and 1 atm) Mercury (Hg) is the exception-liquid Form colored ions in solution Reactivity of metals increases as you go down a group

 D. Halogens (group 17) “salt-formers” Tend to bond with group 1 and 2 Very active non-metals Only group containing all three states of matter at room temperature

E. Noble Gases (group 18) Non-reactive Inert gases 8 valence electrons Octet rule: all elements “want” 8 valance electrons He exception- only 2 valence electrons

Q1. Explain the placement of an unknown element in the periodic table Q2. Compare and contrast metals, metalloids, nonmetals. Q3. Why are noble gases non-reactive

V. Trends A. Electron Configuration Although arranged by atomic number, there are significant trends for electron configuration Groups: same number of valance electrons (valence electrons determine how an element will react with other elements/ compounds) O Draw Li, Na, K Periods: same number of principle energy levels O Draw Na, Mg, Al

Lewis Dot Diagrams Used to determine the type(s) of covalent bonds that an element may make in certain situations Used to predict the type of ion that an atom might make when it forms an ion. Each dot diagram consists of an elemental symbol, which represents the kernel of the atom, and a group of 1-8 dots which shows the configuration of the valence shell electrons (outer-most electron shell of the atom).

Order for placing dots, two dots can start on any side, continue either clockwise or counter clockwise, fill one dot at a time Remember that each side can only hold up to two dots The number of valance electrons can be determined using the group number

Q4. Explain how the number of energy levels containing electrons can be used to determine the Period the element would be found on the periodic table Q5. Draw a Lewis electron-dot structure for Na, Be, Al, Ne Q6. Distinguish between valence and non- valence electrons, given an electron configuration the following electron configurations. 2-1, 2-8-7,

B. Atomic radii (Size)-Table S Measure of the size of the atom Atomic radii measured as half the distance between 2 nuclei  r = ½ d Groups: increase the number of principle energy levels as you go down  Radii increase Period: same number of principle energy levels as you go across Number of protons increases More pull for electrons Radii decrease

C. Ions Octet Rule: all atoms in nature want to “look like” noble gases (8 valance electrons) Metals  Few valence electrons  Lose electrons become + ions Nonmetals  Close to 8  Want to gain electrons become – ions

D. Shielding The electron shielding effect is the effect where core electrons block valence electrons from the nuclear charge of the nucleus. If you increase the number of principle energy levels, shielding increases Positive and negative charges attract each other so the more effective charge the electrons gets, the more attraction there is between the nucleus and the outer electrons. So as the effective nuclear charge increases, the atom and it's radii becomes smaller As the shielding becomes stronger, the nuclear charge decreases and the size of the atom increases-More shielding, bigger atom

Q7. Explain the trends of periods, in terms of nuclear charge and electron shielding seen on the periodic table

E. Ionization Energy Energy to remove the most loosely bound electron from a neutral gaseous atom Trend in periods  From left to right, there is an increase in the number of protons which results in the nuclear charge increasing, the electrons are more strongly attracted and more energy is needed to remove them from the atom

Trends in Group  Ionization energy decreases because valance electrons in each successive element are at a higher energy level and farther from the nucleus

F. Electronegativity Electronegativity value of an atom is a measure of its attraction for electrons when bonded to another atom Table S Periods: from left to right shows an increase in electronegativity Group: the highest electronegativity value is found at the top. Attraction for bonded electrons is less towards the bottom of the group