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The Periodic Table and How it is Organized.
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Why is the Periodic Table important to me?
The periodic table is the most useful tool to a chemist. It organizes lots of information about all the known elements.
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Pre-Periodic Table Chemistry …
…was a mess!!! No organization of elements. Imagine going to a grocery store with no organization!! Difficult to find information. Chemistry didn’t make sense.
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Dmitri Mendeleev: Father of the Table
HOW HIS WORKED… Put elements in rows by increasing atomic weight. Put elements in columns by the way they reacted. SOME PROBLEMS… He left blank spaces for what he said were undiscovered elements. (Turned out he was right!) He broke the pattern of increasing atomic weight to keep similar reacting elements together.
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The Current Periodic Table
Mendeleev wasn’t too far off. Now the elements are put in rows by increasing ATOMIC NUMBER!! The horizontal rows are called periods and are labeled from 1 to 7. The vertical columns are called groups and are labeled from 1 to 18.
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Group Names The group gets its name from the first element in the column. The 13th column, for example, is known as the Boron group. 14th column is the Carbon group and so on.
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Elements are arranged:
Vertically into Groups Horizontally Into Periods
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Why?
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If you looked at one atom of every element in a group you would see…
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Each atom has the same number of electrons in it’s outermost shell.
An example…
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The group 2 atoms all have 2 electrons in their outer shells
Be (Beryllium) Atom Mg (Magnesium) Atom
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The number of outer or “valence” electrons in an atom effects the way an atom bonds.
The way an atom bonds determines many properties of the element. This is why elements within a group usually have similar properties.
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If you looked at an atom from each element in a period
you would see…
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Each atom has the same number of electron holding shells.
An example…
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The period 4 atoms each have 4 electron containing shells or orbits.
4th Shell K (Potassium) Atom Kr (Krypton) Atom Fe (Iron) Atom
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Each group has distinct properties
The periodic Table is divided into several groups based on the properties of different atoms. Use your blank periodic table to outline each group. Write the title for each group. Write the properties of each group within the outlined area of the group.
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Alkali Metals Group 1 Soft Shiny Malleable Ductile Silvery colored
One valence electron Very reactive with oxygen and water!!!
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Alkali Metals reacting with water:
Li (Lithium) Na (Sodium) K (Potassium) Rb (Rubidium) Cs (Cesium) Fr (Francium)
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Alkaline Earth Metals Group 2
Shiny, malleable and ductile Silvery-White Metals Fairly reactive (combine easily with other elements) Good Conductors of electricity Two Valence Electrons Many are found in rocks in the earth’s crust
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Transition Metals Hard, Shiny, Good Conductors Fairly Stable
Groups 3-12 Hard, Shiny, Good Conductors Fairly Stable Often occur in nature uncombined with other elements Malleable (easily bent/hammered into wires or sheets)
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How many things can you think of that have Transition Metals in them?
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Other Metals (poor metals)
Ductile (can be pulled out into wire or thread shape), Malleable, Solids, High Density Opaque (not transparent) Do not oxidize as transition metals do They share properties with both metals and non-metals Si (Silicon) and Ge (Germanium) are very important “semi-conductors”
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What are semiconductors used in?
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Nonmetals Dull not shiny Not malleable Not ductile Brittle as solids
Do not conduct electricity Some are gases at room temp. Metals and nonmetals form compounds where electrons move from the metal to the nonmetal
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Nonmetals What about Hydrogen??
Simplest element with one electron and one proton Makes up 90% of the universe Chemical properties are different from any other group Hydrogen sits atop the periodic table as an independent
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Halogens Most are Poisonous Seven valence electrons
Range from gases to liquids to solids at room temp. Highly reactive especially with Alkali Metals and Alkaline Earth Metals
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Chlorine Gas was used as a chemical weapon during World War I.
It was used by the Nazis in World War II. Yet when mixed with sodium, harmless table salt (NaCl) is the result
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Noble Gases Unreactive
All present in Earth’s atmosphere in small amounts Gases at room temperature Used in Neon lights
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Jellyfish lamps made with noble gases artist- Eric Ehlenberger
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Colors Noble Gases produce in lamp tubes:
Ne (Neon): orange-red Hg (Mercury): light blue Ar (Argon): pale lavender He (Helium): pale peach Kr (Krypton): pale silver Xe (Xenon): pale, deep blue
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Lanthanide Series Actinide Series Soft Malleable Shiny
Very good conductors Used in industry Usually form hard to separate compounds Actinide Series Only uranium and thorium are found on earth in significant amounts. Elements after uranium are man made and very unstable
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