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Published byElinor Barker Modified over 8 years ago
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Periodic Table This table is a remarkable way to show the many relationships between differing kinds of elements The modern table was devised in 1869 by Dimitri Mendeleyev He arranged the elements by weight and by their chemical properties
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Periodic Table "...if all the elements be arranged in order of their atomic weights a periodic repetition of properties is obtained." - Mendeleyev
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Periods and Groups Horizontal rows in the periodic table are called periods Vertical columns are called groups We will learn later why the elements can be arranged in this fashion based on the arrangements of the electrons outside the nucleus
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Periods and Groups Sizes of the atoms decrease as we move from left to right across a period This is due to the increasing number of protons in the nucleus, so the electrical attraction between the nucleus and the orbiting electrons gets stronger and pulls the electrons closer to the nucleus
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Periods and Groups We can display the table to demonstrate other properties as well As you move from left to right across a period, the ability of the atom to attract another electron increases This property is called electronegativity
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Trends in electronegativity
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Periods and Groups All the elements in a column have remarkably similar chemical properties Some of the columns have been given special names to distinguish them The first group is called the alkali metals The second group is the alkaline-earth metals
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Periods and Groups Groups 3-12 are called the transition metals Groups 13-15 are not named Group 16 are the chalcogens Group 17 are the halogens Group 18 are the noble gases and are basically inert
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Lots of Questions Why are there only two elements in the first period? Why are there eight elements in the second and third periods? Why do we jump to eighteen in the fourth period? Why are the chemical properties of a group so similar?
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