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The Periodic Table Cl 35.5 Br 79.9 I 126.9
History of the Periodic Table J.W. Dobereiner – elemental triads Elements in a triad have similar properties The properties of the middle element are ~ averages of the others Element Atomic Mass Cl 35.5 Br 79.9 I 126.9
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The Periodic Table J.A.R. Newlands – Law of Octaves
Arranging elements by increasing atomic mass results in every 8th element having similar properties Demonstrated that there is a pattern to elemental properties
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The Periodic Table Dmitri Mendeleev
Arranged elements in order of increasing atomic mass and made a table Switched the order of some elemental pairs to make them fit
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Mendeleev’s Periodic Table
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Comparison of Ekasilicon and Germanium
The Periodic Table Mendeleev predicted the properties of undiscovered elements: Comparison of Ekasilicon and Germanium Property Ekasilicon Germanium Atomic Mass (amu) 72 72.59 Density (g/mL) 5.5 5.35 Melting Pt. (oC) High 947 Color Gray
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The Periodic Table Henry Moseley –
discovered that the correct way to arrange the elements is in increasing order of atomic number
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Periodic Law When elements are arranged in order of increasing atomic number, their physical and chemical properties show a periodic pattern
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Group - vertical columns (1-18)
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Period – horizontal row (1-7)
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Family Names Groups 1-2; 13-18 – Representative Elements
Group 1 - Alkali Metals Group 2 – Alkaline Earth Metals Group 3 to 12 – Transition Metals Group 13 – Boron Family
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Family Names Group 14 – Carbon Family Group 15 – Nitrogen Family
Group 16 – Chalcogens Group 17 – Halogens Group 18 – Noble (Inert) Gases
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Periodic Table The lanthanoid and actinoid series are known as the InnerTransition Metals Hydrogen – not really a member of any group – definitely a nonmetal in physical properties but has certain chemical properties similar to the group 1 elements
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Metals, Nonmetals, and Semimetals
Shiny luster Conduct electricity Conduct heat Usually solid at room temperature Malleable Ductile Gold Nugget
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Metals, Nonmetals, and Semimetals
Dull luster Poor electrical conductor Poor conductor of heat Many are gases at room temperature Brittle Sulfur
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Metals, Nonmetals, and Semimetals
Semimetals (metalloids) Properties of both metals and nonmetals Semiconductors B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te, At Silicon
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Periodic Trends Periodic Trends – predictable changes in the properties of the elements as you move through the periodic table
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Periodic Trends Atomic Radius – the distance from the center of an atom to its outermost electron Atoms become larger as you go down a given group Atoms become smaller as you go from left to right in a given period
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Periodic Trends Ionic size
Ions increase in size as you go down a given group Metal and nonmetal ions decrease in size as you go from left to right in a given period
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