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UNIT 3 NOTES Fall 2013
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Elements in the same column had the same: physical and chemical properties Valence number Elements in the same row had the same: Number of electron shells Metalloids – elements along zigzag line in periodic table Have properties of metals and nonmetals
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Alkali Metals Group 1A s orbital contains last electron form cations, always 1+ soft metals most reactive
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Alkaline Earth Metals Group 2A s orbital is last orbital filled form cations, always 2+ metals reactive
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Transition Metals Groups 1B – 8B Last electrons are in d orbitals Form cations Many transition metals can form several cations with different charges. Most are metals with high density and melting points.
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Boron Group Group 3A Contain one p orbital electron. Semimetals and metals All form cations 3+ charge
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Carbon Group Group 4A Contain 2 p orbital electrons. C and Si generally form covalent bonds. Ge forms a cation with 2+ charge. Sn and Pb form 2+ and 4+ cations. Nonmetals, metalloids, and metals.
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Nitrogen Group Group 5A Contain one electron in each p orbital. All except for Bi can be a 3- anion or a 3+ cation. Many can form 5+ cations. Nonmetals, metalloids, and metals.
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Oxygen Group Group 6A Contain one set of paired and two sets of unpaired p orbital electrons. Many form 2- anions, all but O can form 2+ and 4+ cations. Nonmetals, metalloids, and metals.
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Halogens Group 7A Halogen means “salt former.” Contain two sets of paired p orbital electrons and one unpaired electron. Commonly form diatomic molecules. F 2 Cl 2 Br 2 I 2 Nonmetals that form anions with 1- charge.
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Noble Gases Group 8A All s and p orbitals contain paired electrons. All are generally unreactive gases. Noble gases do not commonly form ions.
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Ionization Energy Ionization energy is the energy required to remove a negative electron and leave an atom with a positive charge – as an ion.
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Valence Electron An electron in the outermost energy level for an atom. The electrons that interact when atoms form bonds. HLiNa CNFCNF
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The Octet Rule Atoms tend to gain, lose or share electrons in order to have a full set of valence electrons (usually 8)
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Valence Electrons So, every atom will either gain or lose electrons to get an electron configuration like the closest noble gas What does Fluorine want to do? (gain 1 electron)… What do you suppose would happen if you brought a sodium and fluorine atom together in a bond? What would the electrons do to make each atom “happy” like a noble gas configuration? (sodium would lose one, fluorine would gain it)
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Electron Orbital Shapes s-spherical p-dumbbell d-clover leaf f-multi-lobed
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Filling Orbitals
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Atomic Model of Matter Bohr’s Model Proposed that electrons move in definite orbits around the nucleus
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Atomic Model of Matter Quantum Mechanical Model An atom has a small positively charged nucleus surrounded by a large region (electron cloud) containing enough electrons to make the atom neutral
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Periodic Trends Trends in atomic radius, ionization energy, & electronegativity are determined by: The number of energy levels present. The attraction between the positive nucleus and the outer shell electrons. Interfering “shielding” by electrons on inner shells. How close an atom is to completing the stable octet of outer “valence” electrons.
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Electronegativity (1 of 3) Electronegativity is the ability of an atom to attract electrons that are shared in a covalent bond.
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Electronegativity (2 of 3) What are the trends in electronegativity?
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Electronegativity (3 of 3) Electronegativity increases up & to the right. This trend corresponds to stronger attractions to the nucleus. Less shielding effect strengthens attractions to the nucleus in upper rows.
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Atomic Radius (1 of 3) Alkali metals are the largest atoms. Noble gases are the smallest atoms.
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Atomic Radius (2 of 3) Atomic radius trends: 1) Atomic radius increases down a group or column. 2) Atomic radius decreases across a period or row.
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Atomic Radius (3 of 3) How do we explain the trends? 1. Atomic radius increases down a group: Each row adds an energy level. Interior electrons interfere with attraction of valence electrons toward the nucleus “shielding effect” 2. Atomic radius decreases across a row even while the atomic number increases: While in the same energy level, the nucleus becomes more positive & attractive.
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Ionization Energy (1 of 4) Ionization energy is the energy required to remove a negative electron and leave an atom with a positive charge – as an ion. Occurs in solar cells, geiger counters & smoke detectors with Amerecium 241
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Ionization Energy (2 of 4) Alkali metals lose their electrons most easily. Noble gases hold their electrons most tightly.
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Ionization Energy (3 of 4) Removing an electron becomes more difficult across a row. Removing electrons becomes easier down a column.
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Ionization Energy (4 of 4) Removing electrons is more difficult across a row as the nuclear attractions become stronger. Removing electrons is easier down a column as each additional energy level increases the distance from the nucleus and weakens the nuclear attraction. Repulsive shielding by interior electrons also decreases the attraction for each added level.
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