Chapter 5: The Periodic Table

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Periodic Table of Elements
Advertisements

Chapter 7 State Standards: 3.f; 7.a; 7.b; 7.c; 1Contreras.
The History and Arrangement of the Periodic Table
Al Si Ne Li He P H Periodic Table Be O Mg F Na N B C Cl.
The Periodic Table. The Father of the Periodic Table— Dimitri Mendeleev Mendeleev was the first scientist to notice the relationship between the elements.
Chapter 5: The Periodic Table
Chapter 5: The Periodic Table PEPS Rainier Jr/Sr High School Mr. Taylor.
The Modern Periodic Table
Periodic Table of Elements
THE MODERN PERIODIC TABLE
Coloring the Periodic Table Families
Warm-Up 9/16/13 What is the periodic table? Who invented it?
THE MODERN PERIODIC TABLE
The History and Arrangement of the Periodic Table
Periodic Table Families
2/13 Bellringer Answer Questions #1-2 on page 577.
Periodic Table of Elements
The Periodic Table. History of the Periodic Table Solving the Periodic Puzzle  Created by Dmitri Mendeleev in late 1800s  Organized according to increasing.
The Periodic Table of Elements Not just a table, the key to matter!!!!!!!
Periodic Table of Elements
The Periodic Table  Dimitri Mendeleev was the Russian scientist who developed the original Periodic Table  The Periodic Table is an arrangement of all.
Properties of Metals Found on the left side of the Periodic Table (except Hydrogen is not) Metals are good conductors of heat and electricity. shiny.
Families on the Periodic Table Elements on the periodic table can be grouped into families bases on their chemical properties. Each family has a specific.
Elements and Their Properties
Chapter 5: The Periodic Table
Modern Periodic Table 5.2.
Chapter 5 The Periodic Table.
Atoms and The Periodic Table
How is the Periodic Table of Elements Organized?
CHAPTER 3 INTRODUCTION TO THE PERIODIC TABLE. The Periodic Table Based on repeating patterns Patterns help us predict things Ex: Calender months Breakfast,
Chapter 5 Periodic Law. SECTION 1 History of the Periodic Table.
BellWork 9/30/2013 Mg 2+ Cl - Fe 2+ O 2- These elements are written to describe what? Grab a textbook and look it up if needed.
Introduction to the Periodic Table Atomic Number ● Symbol ● Atomic Weight Element ● Compound ● Mixture.
Periodic Table of Elements: Family Properties
3.) Determine the number of protons, neutrons, and electrons, and the mass of an element using the periodic table. Locating metals, nonmetals, metalloids,
Organization of The Periodic Table Open to page 112 and 113.
PHYSICAL SCIENCE CHAPTER 5
Properties of Metals Metals are good conductors of heat and electricity. Metals are shiny. Metals are ductile (can be stretched into thin wires). Metals.
THE PERIODIC TABLE. THE FATHER OF THE PERIODIC TABLE—DMITRI MENDELEEV  Mendeleev was the first scientist to notice the relationship between the elements.
Families on the Periodic Table Elements on the periodic table can be grouped into families based on their chemical properties. Each family has a specific.
Atomic Structure. Subatomic Particles Proton Positive charge + Mass of 1 amu Found in the nucleus # of protons = atomic number 11 Na Sodium.
The Periodic Table. The Table in General Columns (families) –Called families or groups –Elements in a family have similar chemical and physical properties.
The Periodic Table Physical Science Mr. Willis. Periodic Table Arrangement Dmitri Mendeleev created the Periodic Table in 1869 Symbols are primarily Latin.
Periodic Table of Elements. Elements Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth. Scientists have identified 90.
Periodicity Notes Pgs.. Dimitri Mendeleev produced the first useful and widely accepted periodic table Elements were arranged according to increasing.
Quick Question: Who developed the Periodic Table of Elements?
The Periodic Table and Periodic Law Chapter 6. Section 6.1: Development of the Modern Periodic Table Late 1790’s- Lavoisier compiled a list of 23 elements.
SN#3 The Periodic Table.
The Periodic Table of The Elements
Warm Up Describe how the periodic table is arranged.
Modern Periodic Table 5.2.
The History and Arrangement of the Periodic Table
The Periodic Table of The Elements Notes
Atomic Mass and Isotopes
Section 3 Metals, Metalloids and Nonmetals
Introduction to the Periodic Table
The Periodic Table of The Elements
5.2 Electron Configuration & The Periodic Table
Periodic Table of Elements
How is the periodic table organized?
The Periodic Table of The Elements
How is the periodic table organized?
Periodic Table Families & Identifying
Chapter 19 Periodic table Notes
Periodic Table Families & Identifying
Periodic Table of Elements
The Periodic Table.
Ch 10 The Periodic Table.
Bell ringer Compare & Contrast the properties of Metals, non-metals, and metalloids.
Ch 10 The Periodic Table.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 5: The Periodic Table 5.2 The Modern Periodic Table 5.3 Representative groups

The Modern Periodic Table Section 5.2 The Modern Periodic Table

The Modern Periodic Table “Periodic” - Repeating patterns Listed in order of increasing number of protons (atomic #) Properties of elements repeat Periodic Law- when elements arranged by increasing number of protons, properties repeat in pattern

Columns in the Periodic Table -vertical (up & down) -called groups or families -#ed 1-18 or 1A through 8A -elements in same family have similar properties

Rows in the Periodic Table -horizontal (left – right) -called a period -properties change greatly across period -first element in period is very active metal -last element in most periods is noble gas -7 periods (number them on your periodic table)

6 C Carbon 12.01 For example: Carbon has atomic # 6 Element Key Important information about an element is given in each square of the periodic table: its atomic number chemical symbol element name average atomic mass 6 C Carbon 12.01 For example: Carbon has atomic # 6 (or has 6 protons), an average atomic mass of 12.01 and a symbol of C

Atomic Mass Atomic mass is a value that depends on the masses of an element’s isotopes and how common they are in nature. Two isotopes of copper 72% copper-63 28% copper-65 Makes the average 63.56 amu

Determining Average Atomic Mass Copper-63 (mass is 63) is 72% abundant Copper-65 (mass is 65) is 28% abundant Convert percent to a decimal (move decimal 2 places left) Multiply decimal by the mass Add the two together 63*0.72 = 45.36 65*0.28 = 18.2 45.36 + 18.2 = 63.5 average atomic mass

Metals Most solids (Hg is liquid) Luster – shiny. Ductile – drawn into thin wires. Malleable – hammered into sheets. Conductors of heat and electricity. Include transition metals – “bridge” between elements on left & right of table

Non-Metals Properties are generally opposite of metals Poor conductors of heat and electricity Low boiling points Many are gases at room temperature Solid, non-metals are brittle (break easily) Chemical properties vary

Metalloids stair-step pattern Have properties similar to metals and non-metals Ability to conduct heat and electricity varies with temp Better than non-metals but not metals

Variation Across a Period: Left to Right Physical and Chemical properties Atomic size decreases Metallic properties decrease Ability to lose an electron decreases Ability to gain electrons increases

Representative Groups Section 5.3 Representative Groups Hip Hop Classroom The Elements

What are Valence electrons? outermost e-’s Responsible for chem props Elements in same group… same # of VE ALL atoms want full outer energy level (usually 8 VE) To get full outer energy level, some elements: lose e- (metals) gain e- (non-metals) share electrons (some non-metals & metalloids)

Introducing the ten major groups (families) on the modern Periodic Table:

Alkali Metals - 1 valence electron (VE) potassium - 1 valence electron (VE) - soft, silver-white, shiny metals never found pure most reactive metals Reactivity increases down group reactivity increases

Label the Alkali Metals to your PT

Alkaline Earth Metals - 2 VE - not as reactive as alkali metals magnesium - 2 VE - not as reactive as alkali metals often mixed with Al forms strong/light weight alloys

Alkaline Earth Metals Magnesium Calcium Used to make steel (light metal w/o losing strength) photosynthesis (chlorophyll) Calcium bones & teeth Chalk, limestone, pearls, plaster

Label the Alkaline Earth Metals to your PT

Boron Family -3 VE Boron Hard/brittle never found pure in nature in borax...used to make detergents & cosmetics

Boron Family 13 Al Aluminum 26.98 Aluminum most abundant metal in earth’s crust important metal for industry light, strong, slow to corrode 13 Al Aluminum 26.98

Label the Boron Family on your PT

Carbon Family 4 VE Can gain 4 e-, lose 4 e-, or share e- silicon 4 VE Can gain 4 e-, lose 4 e-, or share e- Most compounds in body contain C Si 2nd most abundant element in Earth’s crust Si used to tip saw blades

Label the Carbon Family on your PT

Nitrogen Family 5 VE Tend to gain 3 e- N and P used in fertilizers Arsenic 5 VE Tend to gain 3 e- N and P used in fertilizers P on tips of matches

Label the Nitrogen Family on your PT

Oxygen Family 6 VE Tend to gain 2 e- O very abundant element sulfur Oxygen Family 6 VE Tend to gain 2 e- O very abundant element S used in fertilizers O needed for digestion

Label the Oxygen Family on your PT

Halogen Family (“salt-former”) -7 VE -most active nonmetals -never found pure in nature -react with alkali metals easily (forms salts) -F most active halogen

F compounds in toothpaste Cl kills bacteria Halogens cont… bromine F compounds in toothpaste Cl kills bacteria I keeps thyroid gland working properly

Label the Halogen Group on your Periodic Table

The Noble Gases (Inert Gases) Neon - non-reactive outermost e- shell is full (8 VE) In “neon” lights -in earth’s atmosphere (less than 1%)

Label the Noble Gases on your Periodic Table

Transition Metals ductile, malleable, conductors mercury Almost all solids at room temp (Hg exception) ductile, malleable, conductors VE varies Less Reactive than Groups 1 & 2 Fe, Co, and Ni produce magnetic field

Label the Transition Metals on your periodic table

Rare Earth Elements Lanthanide series (period 6) uranium Lanthanide series (period 6) Actinide Series (period 7) Some radioactive Separated from table to make easy to read/print silver, silvery-white, or gray metals. Conduct electricity

Label the Lanthanide Series on your PT

Label the Actinide Series on your PT

You may watch more videos about the elements at: http://www.periodicvideos.com/ or sing along at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zGM-wSKFBpo&feature=related elemental funkiness - Mark Rosengarten hip hop classroom