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Periodic Relationships Among the Elements Chapter 7 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
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8.1 When the Elements Were Discovered
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8.3 Atomic radius – one-half the distance between the two nuclei in two adjacent metal atoms or in a diatomic molecule
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8.3
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General Trend in First Ionization Energies 8.4 Increasing First Ionization Energy
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Electron affinity is the negative energy change that occurs when an electron is accepted by an atom in the gaseous state to form an anion. X (g) + e - X - (g) 8.5 F (g) + e - F - (g) O (g) + e - O - (g) H = -328 kJ/mol EA = +328 kJ/mol H = -141 kJ/mol EA = +141 kJ/mol
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Electron affinity – the energy change in kJ accompanying the addition of 1 mol of e- to 1 mol of gaseous atoms or ions.
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SAMPLE PROBLEMRanking Elements by Atomic Size PLAN: SOLUTION: PROBLEM:Using only the periodic table (not Figure 8.15)m rank each set of main group elements in order of decreasing atomic size: (a) Ca, Mg, Sr(b) K, Ga, Ca(c) Br, Rb, Kr(d) Sr, Ca, Rb Elements in the same group increase in size and you go down; elements decrease in size as you go across a period. (a) Sr > Ca > MgThese elements are in Group 2A(2). (b) K > Ca > GaThese elements are in Period 4. (c) Rb > Br > KrRb has a higher energy level and is far to the left. Br is to the left of Kr. (d) Rb > Sr > CaCa is one energy level smaller than Rb and Sr. Rb is to the left of Sr.
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SAMPLE PROBLEMRanking Elements by First Ionization Energy PLAN: SOLUTION: PROBLEM:Using the periodic table only, rank the elements in each of the following sets in order of decreasing IE 1 : (a) Kr, He, Ar(b) Sb, Te, Sn(c) K, Ca, Rb(d) I, Xe, Cs IE decreases as you proceed down in a group; IE increases as you go across a period. (a) He > Ar > Kr (b) Te > Sb > Sn (c) Ca > K > Rb (d) Xe > I > Cs Group 8A(18) - IE decreases down a group. Period 5 elements - IE increases across a period. Ca is to the right of K; Rb is below K. I is to the left of Xe; Cs is furtther to the left and down one period.
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Group 1A Elements (ns 1, n 2) 8.6
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Group 1A Elements Increasing reactivity 8.6 Low Ionization energies. Tendency to lose the single valance electron They are very reactive, never found in nature in pure state
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Group 2A Elements (ns 2, n 2) 8.6
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Group 2A Elements Increasing reactivity 8.6 Alkaline earth metals Metallic character increases from top to bottom
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Group 3A Elements (ns 2 np 1, n 2) 8.6
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Group 3A Elements 8.6 Boron is a metalloid; the rest are metals
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Group 4A Elements (ns 2 np 2, n 2) 8.6
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Group 4A Elements 8.6 Carbon a non metal Silicon and Germanium are metalloids Then all metals
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Group 5A Elements 8.6
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Group 5A Elements 8.6 Nitrogen and Phosphorous are non metals Arsenic and antimony are metalloids Bismuth is a metal
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Group 6A Elements 8.6
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Group 6A Elements 8.6 The 1 st three are non metals The last two are metalloids
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Group 7A Elements 8.6
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Group 7A Elements Increasing reactivity 8.6 All are halogens and are non metals Great reactivity Never found in their element form in nature High ionization energies Large positive electron affinity
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Group 8A Elements 8.6 Completely filled ns and np subshells. Highest ionization energy of all elements. No tendency to accept extra electrons.
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Trends in metallic behavior.
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