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Trends of the Periodic Table I. Oxidation Numbers (p. 222) II. Reactivity III. Atomic Radius (pp. 163-166) IV. Ionization Energy (pp. 167-168) V. Electronegativity.

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Presentation on theme: "Trends of the Periodic Table I. Oxidation Numbers (p. 222) II. Reactivity III. Atomic Radius (pp. 163-166) IV. Ionization Energy (pp. 167-168) V. Electronegativity."— Presentation transcript:

1 Trends of the Periodic Table I. Oxidation Numbers (p. 222) II. Reactivity III. Atomic Radius (pp. 163-166) IV. Ionization Energy (pp. 167-168) V. Electronegativity (pp. 168-169)

2 I. Oxidation Numbers An oxidation number is the charge of a monatomic ion. Oxidation numbers are based on the valence electrons that an element will lose OR gain to have a full outer energy level. Notice the trend on the periodic table...

3 II. Reactivity A. The trend: for metals-- 1. across a period the reactivity decreases; 2. down a group the reactivity increases –The rationale... B. The trend: for non-metals-- 1. Across a period the reactivity increases; 2. down a group the reactivity decreases –The rationale...

4 III. Atomic Radius The trend: (1) across a period the radius decreases (2) down a group the radius increases The rationale: Increasing positive charge in the nucleus and negative charge in the electron cloud causes an increased attraction and therefore a shorter distance. More electrons between the nucleus and the valence electrons weaken the attraction between them, thereby allowing a wider gap.

5 Atomic Radius for IONS The trend: (1) positive ions are always smaller than their neutral counterparts (2) negative ions always become larger than their neutral counterparts The rationale: The particles found in greatest number have the greatest force: –if there are more protons than electrons (pos’ve), the nucleus pulls them in; –if there are more electrons (neg’ve), they repel each other enough to move farther away from the nucleus

6 IV. Ionization Energy The energy required to remove an electron OR how strongly an atom holds on to its valence electrons The trend: (1) across a period the IE increases (2) down a group the IE decreases The rationale: As you move across the PT, atoms are less willing to give e - up and actually want them more (they have an increasing hold on val. e - ) as you go down a group, the increasing size of atoms allows the hold on valence e - to be weaker, therefore decreasing IE

7 V. Electronegativity (pp. 168-169, 263-264) The relative ability of the element to attract electrons in a chemical bond (how bad it’s pulling for another electron) The trend: (1) across a period the EN increases (2) down a group the EN decreases The rationale: across a period, elements are more ‘interested’ in gaining electrons because that helps them be closer to the noble gases; down a group the shielding factor means an element ‘cares’ less about gaining another electron

8 V. Electronegativity (pp. 168-169, 263-264) Helpful hint: Fluorine is the most EN element! (remember: the T-Rex of the PT) EN values can help you predict the bonding character in a compound. difference in EN values: Ionic 1.7 < x < 4 Polar Covalent 0.5 < x < 1.7 Covalent (non-polar)0 < x < 0.5

9 V. Electronegativity & Bonding Ionic bonds result when one element is WAY MORE EN than the other…(big difference in EN values) His EN: _______ Her EN: Diff.: Na F

10 V. Electronegativity & Bonding Polar Covalent Bonds result when one element has a greater EN value than the other, but not so great of a difference as in ionic bonds His EN: _______ Her EN: Diff.: O H

11 V. Electronegativity & Bonding Covalent bonds occur when the EN values are REALLY similar. The affinity for electrons is almost equal, so they are in ‘gridlock’… they must share their e - ; there’s no clear-cut ‘winner’ Red EN: _______ Blue EN: Diff.: C S

12 Summary for Trends increasesdecreases increases decreases increases decreases Reactivity AR EN IE


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