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The Periodic Table of Elements

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1 The Periodic Table of Elements
6th grade Science Mrs. Setsma Chapter 4 CHEMISTRY

2 An “element” Square

3 Periodic Table In 1869, a Russian Scientist, Dmitri Mendeleev created the very first Periodic Table. He discovered a set of patterns that applied to all elements. To start, Mendeleev wrote each of the discovered 63 elements. He organized them based on their melting point, density, and color. He also included the element’s atomic mass. Then he noticed a pattern and created the world’s first edition of what we know today as the Periodic Table of Elements. What is atomic mass? It is it the AVERAGE mass of all the isotopes of an element. An isotope is an atom that has the same number of protons and a different number of neutrons of atoms of the same element.

4 How is the Periodic Table Arranged today?
Periodic=regular, repeated pattern Today’s table is arranged by atomic number Periods are found in horizontal rows. There are seven total on the table. Groups are found in vertical rows. There are 18 families on the Periodic Table. There are 117 known elements found on the periodic table. (although there is no #117).

5 How is the Periodic Table Arranged today?
The Alkali Metals are in Group #1 on the periodic table. Shade them orange. They are very reactive and are always found in combination with other elements. The Alkaline Earth Metals are found in Group #2. Each is fairly hard, gray-white and a good conductor of electricity. They are fairly reactive although not as much as the Alkali Metals. Shade them in yellow.

6 How is the Periodic Table Arranged today?
The Transition Metals are in groups #3-12. These include most of the familiar metals such as iron, copper, nickel, silver and gold. Most are hard and shiny and are good conductors of electricity. Shade these in green. In groups on the Periodic table, only some elements are metals. Most are not reactive—for example, aluminum, tin and lead. Shade the metals in the “mixed groups” in light blue.

7 The Periodic Table Today
The first row of elements that sit below the Periodic Table are called the Lanthanide series. They are located here to make the table more compact. Lanthandes are soft, malleable and have a high conductivity. Shade the Lanthanides pink. The elements below the lanthanides are the actindes. Many of the actinides are not found naturally in nature but made in a laboratory. Some only last a fraction of a second. These elements (man-made) are called “Synthetic elements.” Shade the actinide series red.

8 The Periodic Table Today
Non metals are elements that lack the properties of a metal. Most non metals are poor conductors of electricity and heat and are reactive with other elements. Solid non metals are dull and brittle. Ten of the sixteen nonmetals are a gas at room temperature. Some examples are Oxygen & Nitrogen. Group #14 on the Periodic Table is the Carbon Family.

9 The Periodic Table today
Group #15 is the Nitrogen family. It includes the elements Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Arsenic, Antimony and Brismuth. Group #16 is the Oxygen Family. Group #17 is the Halogens— “salt-forming.” These elements typically gains are shares one electron when it shares with other elements. Group #18 are the Noble Gases. They are VERY unreactive and were not discovered til the late 1800’s. Some examples include Helium, Neon and Radon.


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