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The Periodic Chart From then to Now... The History 1669-Henning Brand discovered Phosphorus 1680-Robert Boyle rediscovered Phosphorus 1789-Lavosier.

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Presentation on theme: "The Periodic Chart From then to Now... The History 1669-Henning Brand discovered Phosphorus 1680-Robert Boyle rediscovered Phosphorus 1789-Lavosier."— Presentation transcript:

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2 The Periodic Chart From then to Now...

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4 The History 1669-Henning Brand discovered Phosphorus 1680-Robert Boyle rediscovered Phosphorus 1789-Lavosier wrote the 1st chemistry text 1809-There were 47 known elements 1862-Beguyer deChancourtois noticed periodicity 1863-Newlands classified 56 elements into 11 groups, octaves 1869-Mendeleev created a table and was able to predict the existence of 2 new elements 1869-Meyer also created a table, but did not get the credit for it 1900-Moseley developed the Periodic Law 1944-Seaborg proposed the Actinide series

5 History of the periodic table In the 1700’s only 30 elements were identified Dobereiner in the 1800’s noticed certain elements could be grouped into sets of 3 called triads Dobereiner--triads

6 TRIAD PROPERTIES Properties similar – Group 1 are soft metals Reactiveness similar – Group 1 are very reactive with water Middle element value is average of one above and one below Triad—3 elements with similar properties one value is an average of the other 2

7 PROPERTIES OF TRIADS Li (3) Atomic number Ca 40.1 amu Atomic mass Cl 1.56 g/cm 3 Density Na (11) Atomic number Sr 87.6 amu Atomic mass Br 3.12 g/cm 3 Density K (19) Atomic Number Ba 137.0 amu Atomic mass I 4.95 g/cm 3 Density

8 Newlands – mid 1800’s Now 49 elements Noticed that when arranged by increasing mass, every 8 th element had similar properties Called law of octaves Newlands -- octaves

9 MENDELEEV VS MEYER Both made discoveries at the same time but Mendeleev was the first to publish them Wrote names and properties on cards and arranged them in various ways: In increasing mass In repetitive properties Both couldn’t be done at the same time Decided putting them in order of repetitive properties was more important

10 DISCREPANCIES In order to put the elements in similar groups according to properties, some of the masses were out of order Thought that the atomic masses were wrong

11 MENDELEEV’S PERIODIC TABLE When he put elements in order according to their properties without regard to their masses, some elements seemed to be missing He predicted the existence of these missing elements and when discovered, they fit perfectly into his pattern But – Mendeleev was not entirely correct The atomic masses, when recalibrated, were not incorrect. This left some atomic masses out of order on his periodic table

12 Mendeleev’s notes

13 Mendeleev’s 1869 Periodic Table

14 LATE 1800’S MOSELY’S PERIODIC TABLE Developed the idea of atomic #’s Assigned one to each element based on the # of protons in their nucleus Arranged elements according to the number of protons instead of mass Now, elements are in a numerical repetitive order as well as grouped according to their properties Since masses aren’t figured into arranging the periodic table, it’s ok for them to be out of order

15 The Periodic Law The periodic properties of the elements are functions of their atomic number. In other words, the elements are arranged on the basis of their ground state electron configuration

16 Periodic Table of 1944

17 The Modern Periodic Table

18 Vertical Columns The vertical columns are arranged in groups or families. They are numbered from left to right Elements in a group have the same electron structure in their outer subshell (valence electrons)

19 Electron Review An electron shell, also known as a main energy level, is a group of atomic orbitals with the same value of the principal quantum number n. Electron shells are made up of one or more subshell, which have orbitals with the same angular momentum quantum number l. (1 of s, 3 of p, 5 of d and 7 of f orbitals)

20 States with the same value of n are related, and said to lie within the same electron shell.  Example: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 6  1s 2 and 2s 2 2p 6 are in the same electron shell States with the same value of n and also l are said to lie within the same electron subshell.  Example: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 6  1s 2 are in the same electron subshell  2s 2 are in the same electron subshell  2p 6 are in the same electron subshell

21 Electron shells make up the electron configuration. It can be shown that the number of electrons that can reside in a shell is equal to 2n 2. Shells and subshells are defined by the quantum numbers. In large atoms, shells above the second shell overlap (Aufbau principle)

22 Valence Shell The valence shell is the outermost shell of an atom, which contains the electrons most likely to participate in a chemical reaction with other atoms or to determine chemical properties. Electrons in the valence shell are referred to as valence electrons.

23 Let’s see... Group 18 Ne =1s 2 2s 2 2p 6 Ar = 1s 2 2s 2 2p 6 3s 2 3p 6 Kr = [Ar]4s 2 3d 10 4p 6 Xe = [Kr]5s 2 4d 10 5p 6 Rn = [Xe]6s 2 4f 14 5d 10 6p 6

24 Further Breakdown s-orbital elementsd-orbital elementsp-orbital elements f-orbital elements

25 Horizontal Rows The horizontal rows are the periods. The periods are numbered from the top down. Elements in the same period have the same principal energy level

26 Let’s see... Period 2 (Period n) Li = 1s 2 2s 1 Be = 1s 2 2s 2 B = 1s 2 2s 2 2p 1 C = 1s 2 2s 2 2p 2

27 Group Names Groups 1-2 and 13-18 (except Hydrogen) are the main group elements (also known as the representative elements). Groups 3-12 are the transition metals

28 Specific Group Names Group 1: alkali metals Group 2: alkaline earth metals Group 11: coinage metals (not IUPAC approved) Group 15: pnictogens (not IUPAC approved) Group 16: chalcogens Group 17: halogens Group 18: noble gases

29 Period Identifications The elements in the 1st f-period are the Lanthanide series. The elements in the 2nd f-period are the Actinide series

30 Group 1: Alkali Metals Hydrogen is NOT included in Group 1 Metals that react with water to make an alkaline solution (basic) Highly reactive, soft (less than 1 on the Mohs scale), and conductive

31 Group 1 Electrons Not found in their elemental form but in compounds  example: NaCl, KOH There is only 1 valence electron. (ns 1 ) If the one electron is lost, it will be stable

32 Mohs Hardness Scale The scale used to describe the hardness of a material is the Mohs Hardness Scale The scale is from 0-10 (softest to hardest)  example: Talc is 1 on the Mohs scale and the Diamond is 10

33 Group 2: Alkaline Earth Metals The alkaline earth metals are silvery colored, soft, low-density metals, which react readily with halogens to form ionic salts, and with water, to form strongly alkaline hydroxides. Highly reactive, but not as reactive as alkali metals, usually found as compounds not in elemental form

34 Alkaline Earth Electrons There are 2 valence electrons. (ns 2 ) It takes more energy to lose 2 electrons than it does to lose only one (like the alkali metals)

35 Valence Electrons of Groups 13- 18 Group 13 = ns2np1 Group 14 = ns2np2 Group 15 = ns2np3 Group 16 = ns2np4 Group 17 (halogens) = ns2np5 Group 18 (noble gases) = ns2np6

36 Group 17: The Halogens Halogens are highly reactive non-metals. Only 7 valence electrons (just one short of a full and stable valence shell) so they want to gain an electron Reactive with most metals to form salts

37 Group 18: Noble Gases Have a full set of electrons (n 2 p 6 ) Low chemical reactivity and so they are very stable

38 Hydrogen Hydrogen is in a class by itself because it is the most common element in the Universe! Hydrogen only has one proton and one electron and can react with almost anything

39 Transition Metals Groups 3-12 (d-block) Do NOT have identical electron configurations in the outer shell. Why?  The Lanthanide and Actinide series are contained within the d-block and have f- orbitals

40 Lanthanide & Actinide Lanthanide are the rare earth series from atomic #58 to #71  shiny metals with similar reactivity to alkaline Actinide are from atomic #89 to #103  nuclei are unstable, radioactive As you move to the right, electrons are filled in the f-orbital

41 Metallic Character Approximately 2/3’s of the elements are metals.  See periodic chart Metals have unique properties:  luster: mirror like shine that reflects light  conductivity: ability to conduct heat or electricity  malleable: ability to be rolled or hammered  ductile: ability to be drawn into wire

42 Alloys Metals that are mixed with other metals to form a stable compound are called alloys  example: Brass is Copper and Zinc  example: Steel is Iron, Tin, Nickel, Lead, etc.

43 Nonmetals Poor conductors of heat and electricity Not malleable Many are gasses One is liquid – Br Some are solids (brittle and dull) More electrons in outer level Form negatively charged ions

44 METALLOIDS Metalloids – have properties of both metals and nonmetals  On the stairstep; exclude Aluminum and Polonium


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