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The Periodic Table. History  Created by Dmitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist (1869)  Organized the elements (~60) in order of atomic mass  Noticed that.

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Presentation on theme: "The Periodic Table. History  Created by Dmitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist (1869)  Organized the elements (~60) in order of atomic mass  Noticed that."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Periodic Table

2 History  Created by Dmitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist (1869)  Organized the elements (~60) in order of atomic mass  Noticed that certain similarities appeared at regular intervals  These repeating patterns were called periodic

3 Definition – Periodic Table of Elements  An arrangement of the elements in order of their atomic numbers so that elements with similar properties fall in the same column, or group

4 Groups (Families) Vertical columns are called groups or families

5 Periods Horizontal rows are called periods

6 Noble Gases (Inert Gases)

7 Noble Gases  very unreactive with other elements because outer shell of electrons is full (8 electrons) Helium (He) Neon (Ne) Argon (Ar) Krypton (Kr) Xenon (Xe) Radon (Rn)

8 Halogens

9  Most reactive nonmetals Fluorine (F) Chlorine (Cl) Bromine (Br) Iodine (I) Astatine (At)  Halogens commonly react with metals to form salts (ex. NaCl)  Seven electrons in outer shell

10 Alkali Metals

11  Very reactive Lithium (Li) Sodium (Na) Potassium (K) Rubidium (Rb) Cesium (Cs) Francium (Fr)  Only one electron in outer shell

12 Alkali Metals  Highly reactive with water and air!!!  Usually stored in kerosene to prevent reactions with air and moisture  Silver appearance  Soft; can be cut with a regular butter knife  http://www2.uni-siegen.de/~pci/versuche/pics/anim/natrium.gif http://www2.uni-siegen.de/~pci/versuche/pics/anim/natrium.gif

13 Step One – Na added to H 2 O

14 Step Two – Na begins to melt

15 Step Three – Kaboom! H 2 ignites

16 Step Four – H 2 burns

17 Alkaline Earth Metals

18  Contain two electrons in their outer shell  Less reactive than alkali metals  Harder, denser, and stronger than alkali metals  Higher melting points than alkali metals

19 Alkaline Earth Metals  Beryllium (Be)  Magnesium (Mg)  Calcium (Ca)  Strontium (Sr)  Barium (Ba)  Radium (Ra)

20 Transition Metals

21  Less reactive than alkali metals and alkaline earth metals Palladium (Pd), Platinum (Pt), and Gold (Au) are very unreactive  Good conductors of electricity  High luster (shiny)

22 Main-Group Elements (BCNO)  Consists of non-metals, metalloids, and metals  Properties among these elements vary greatly  Some very common elements are located here

23 Lanthanides

24  Similar reactivity to Group 2 alkaline earth metals  Shiny metals

25 Actinides

26  All are radioactive  Only four occur naturally on Earth Thorium (Th) Protactinium (Pa) Uranium (U) Neptunium (Np)  All others are synthetic (made in a lab)

27 Exceptions  Hydrogen – has properties that do not resemble those of other elements  Helium – although it only has two electrons in its outer shell, He is very stable and unreactive

28 Element  Def. - an elementary substance consisting of one type of atom  Elements are the building blocks of all substances  The smallest part of an element that can exist is called an atom

29 Atoms  Atoms are made up of smaller subatomic particles, but these particles DO NOT have the properties of the elements  The three subatomic particles are: Protons Neutrons Electrons

30 What an Atom Looks Like  Theoretically, an atom looks like this: Nucleus of the atom – Contains the protons and neutrons Electrons spin around the outside of the nucleus

31 Protons  Positively charged (+)  Located in nucleus  Abbreviated with a lowercase p  Mass of a proton = 1.673 x 10 -24 g

32 Neutrons  No charge  Located in nucleus  Abbreviated with a lowercase n  Mass = 1.675 x 10 -24 g  This mass is slightly greater than that of a proton

33 Electrons  Negative charge (-)  NOT found in nucleus  Electrons are contained in an orbital – a cloudlike region around the nucleus that contains various levels  Abbreviated as e -  Mass = 9.110 x 10 -28 g (much smaller than protons and neutrons)  Number of electrons in an atom = the number of protons in that same atom

34 Movement of Electrons  Because electrons are not held together in the nucleus, they have the ability to move from atom to atom (more on this later)

35 Compounds  A distinct substance composed of two or more elements combined in a definite proportion by mass  Examples: H 2 O (water) NaCl (sodium chloride) C 9 H 8 O 4 (acetylsalicylic acid)

36 Mixtures  Matter containing two or more substances, which can be present in variable amounts  Two types – Homogeneous – matter that has uniform properties throughout (ie. Salt water) Heterogeneous – matter without a uniform composition, having two or more components or phases (ie. Trail mix – yum!)


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