Honors Chemistry Chapter 5 Review Game. Famous Chemists The Periodic Table Periodic Trends I Periodic Trends II 1 point 1 point 1 point 1 point 1 point.

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Presentation transcript:

Honors Chemistry Chapter 5 Review Game

Famous Chemists The Periodic Table Periodic Trends I Periodic Trends II 1 point 1 point 1 point 1 point 1 point 1 point 1 point 1 point 2 points 2 points 2 points 2 points 2 points 2 points 2 points 2 points 3 points 3 points 3 points 3 points 3 points 3 points 3 points 3 points 4 points 4 points 4 points 4 points 4 points 4 points 4 points 4 points 5 points 5 points 5 points 5 points 5 points 5 points 5 points 5 points

This chemist was known as “the father of the first periodic table”. 1 pointCheck

Who was Mendeleev? 1 point Back to Category Slide

This chemist separated known elements into groups called “triads”. 2 pointsCheck

Who was Dobereiner? 2 points Back to Category Slide

Organizing the elements into groups called octaves was first discovered by this famous chemist. 3 pointsCheck

Who was Newlands? 3 points Back to Category Slide

This man discovered the trend of atomic number on the periodic table. Unfortunately he died in WWI. 4 pointsCheck

Who was Moseley? 4 points Back to Category Slide

Moseley worked in this man’s (famous for his gold foil experiment) chemistry lab as a student. 5 pointsCheck

5 points Back to Category Slide Who was Rutherford?

Horizontal rows on the periodic table. 1 pointCheck

What are periods? 1 point Back to Category Slide

The family names of Group 1, 2, 17, and pointsCheck

What are alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, halogens, and noble gases? 2 points Back to Category Slide

Four characteristics of metals. 3 pointsCheck

What are malleable, ductile, shiny, conducts heat, conducts electricity, and typically solid at room temperature (I listed six). 3 points Back to Category Slide

The electron configuration of nickel. 4 pointsCheck

What is 1s 2 2s 2 2p 6 3s 2 3p 6 4s 2 3d 8 ? 4 points Back to Category Slide

A chemistry experiment calls for a compound of bromine ions, but unfortunately this compound is not available. Ruth uses a substitute of chlorine ions, Betsy uses a substitute of selenium ions and Joe uses a sample of phosphorus ions. This person’s experiment worked the best and why. 5 pointsCheck

Who was Ruth’s experiment? (because bromine and chlorine are in the same family they share the most chemical properties)? 5 points Back to Category Slide

This occurs when inner electrons block the nuclear charge effects for outer protons. 1 pointCheck

What is shielding? 1 point Back to Category Slide

As you move down a family, this happens to atomic radius. 2 pointsCheck

What is atomic radius increases? 2 points Back to Category Slide

This is the reason for atomic radius increasing as you move down a family. 3 pointsCheck

3 points Back to Category Slide What is electrons are placed in electron levels that are farther away from the nucleus?

The definition of electronegativity. 4 pointsCheck

4 points Back to Category Slide What is the attraction or pull of electrons towards an atom?

Place the following atoms in order of strongest attraction to weakest attraction when trying to attain an electron in terms of their electronegativity. O, N, Ne, S, P 5 pointsCheck

What is: O > N > S > P > Ne 5 points Back to Category Slide

The amount of energy needed to remove an electron from an atom. 1 pointCheck

What is ionization energy? 1 point Back to Category Slide

The trend for ionization energy as you move across a period. 2 pointsCheck

What is ionization energy increases? 2 points Back to Category Slide

This group of elements has the highest ionization energy and the reason why. 3 pointsCheck

What are the noble gases and they have met the octet rule already? 3 points Back to Category Slide

As you move down a group this is the ionic size trend. 4 pointsCheck

What is ionic radius increases? 4 points Back to Category Slide

The reason for why group the atomic radius decreases from left to right on the Periodic Table. 5 pointsCheck

What is the atomic radius decreases due to the fact that nuclear charge increases (pulling in on electrons) and shielding remains constant. 5 points Back to Category Slide