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Periodic Trends (a.k.a. “Periodicity”)

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Presentation on theme: "Periodic Trends (a.k.a. “Periodicity”)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Periodic Trends (a.k.a. “Periodicity”)
Properties of atoms that can be predicted by patterns on the periodic table.

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3 Atomic Radius the SIZE of an atom from nucleus to outer energy level
More energy levels (bottom) = larger radius or size Atoms with more p+ (right) are smaller because positive charge attracts e- more

4 Atomic Size Increase

5 Metallic Character Metals Nonmetals

6 Metallic Character Metallic character means an atom tends to give up electrons easily Atoms with fewer valence e- (left) want to lose them to get an octet Larger atoms (bottom) lose e- more easily because p+ in nucleus are farther away.

7 Metallic Character Trend

8 Electronegativity The ability of an atom to attract and hold an extra electron (how “greedy” atom is for e-) Atoms that are small (top) can attract e- easier since nucleus is closer Atoms with ALMOST full valence shells (right) really want more e- to be stable/happy

9 Electronegativity Trend

10 Ionization Energy The energy needed to remove an electron from an atom (a.k.a. to make the atom an ion) More electronegative = harder to remove an electron = higher ionization energy

11 Ionization Energy

12 Reactivity Determined by position on the table:
Metals: most metallic character Non-metals: most electronegativity

13 Review Questions: How do energy levels determine size?
Which element probably has the most metallic character? Which is the largest? Why does it take more energy to remove an electron from F than it does to remove an e- from Cs? Pair up the trends according to their similarity (look at arrows!).


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