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Periodic Table Organizing the Elements
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Antoine Lavoisier (1790s) French Chemist
About 23 elements Au, Ag, C, O
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Antoine Lavoisier (1790s) Electricity allowed compounds to break down into elements Spectrometer Industrial Revolution – Petrochemicals, soaps, fertilizers, and dyes.
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John Newlands ( ) English – Arrange elements in increasing atomic mass order, properties repeated themselves every eighth element Octet rule
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John Newlands ( ) Octet rule does not apply to Hydrogen and Helium
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Lothar Meyer (1830-1895) German Chemist
Relationship between Mass and properties
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Dmitri Mendeleev ( ) Russian Chemist About 70 elements
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Dmitri Mendeleev Predicted the existence and properties of the missing elements Left blanks for them on his table.
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Dmitri Mendeleev How did he line up the elements?
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Dmitri Mendeleev How did he line up the elements?
Increasing atomic mass Similar properties side by side
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Dmitri Mendeleev How did he line up the elements?
Left blank spaces for unknown elements
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Henry Moseley ( ) 1913 British physicist – determined atomic number Lines up atoms by increasing atomic number
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Today’s Periodic Table
Glenn Seaborg Lanthanides & Actinides
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Alkali metals Alkaline earth metals Transition Metals
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Alkali metals Alkaline earth metals Transition Metals
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Alkali metals Alkaline earth metals Transition Metal
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Non-metals Noble gases
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Non-metals Noble gases
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Non-metals Noble gases Halogens Metalloids
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Non-metals Noble gases Halogens Metalloids
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Periods – horizontal rows
Seven periods Properties change when move across period
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Periodic Law Properties repeat from one period to next
Periodic Law – periodic repetition of physical & chemical properties
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Elements with similar properties are in same column.
Group/family- Vertical column 1A, 2A, 3A, etc.
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Identified by number & letter Column 1A
Identified by number & letter Column 1A ? React vigorously with water (explosive)
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Periodic Trends Atomic Radius Decrease Increase
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Atoms lose electrons to form cations (positive)
Empty orbital Repulsion is less between electrons
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Atoms gain electrons to form anions (negative)
Repulsion is increased between electrons = cloud gets bigger
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Ionic Radius Increases 5A, 6A, 7A all Gain electrons Larger Smaller
decreases 5A, 6A, 7A all Gain electrons Increases
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Ionization Energy energy required to remove an electron from a
gaseous atom.
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Ionization Energy – Increases Decreases
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Octet Rule – (John Newlands)
Atoms tend to gain, lose or share electrons to acquire a full set of valence electrons.
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Electronegativity Ability to attract electrons in a chemical bond.
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Periodic Trends Electronegativity – Increases Decreases
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Reactivity of metals and non-metals
Most reactive metal ? Francium low electronegativity
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Most reactive non-metal ? Fluorine
high electronegativity
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Properties Metals – high conductivity & high luster
Ductile (pull into wire) Malleable (sheets)
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Representative elements
80% of elements are metals Usually solid at room temp. Except? Hg
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Non-metals Upper right corner of table Non-lustrous Poor conductors
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Non-metals Gas O Cl Brittle solid S Group 7A – Halogens
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Non-metals Group VIII A – noble/inert gas undergo very few reactions
Heavy stair-step line - metalloids
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Non-metals Metalloids – between metals & non-metals
Properties between both Si & Ge – computer chips and solar cells
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Reactivity of Metals Ability of a metal to undergo a chemical change
Lose electrons
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Reactivity of Metals decreases INCREASES
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Reactivity of Non-Metals
INCREASES decreases
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