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Chapter 3: Introduction to the Periodic Table Section 3.1: Development of the Periodic Table.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 3: Introduction to the Periodic Table Section 3.1: Development of the Periodic Table."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 3: Introduction to the Periodic Table Section 3.1: Development of the Periodic Table

2 Objectives: Summarize the steps in the historical development of the periodic table, Predict similarities in properties of the elements by using the periodic table

3 Organization Scientists noticed that some elements had similar properties and they wanted to organize the elements into a system that would show similarities and acknowledge difference http://www.ptable.com/

4 J.W. Dobereiner’s Triads (1829) Classified some elements in groups of three- called triads Triads had similar properties and varied in an orderly way according to their atomic masses Ex: p. 85- Cl (35.45u), Br (81.18u), I (126.9u) Actual for Br = 79.9u p. 86 – Ca (40.08u), Sr (88.69u), Ba (137.3u) Actual for Sr = 87.62u

5 Dmitri Mendeleev (1869) Developed a periodic table of elements according to increasing atomic mass Elements were in vertical columns starting with the lightest Elements in horizontal rows displayed similar properties

6 Dmitri Mendeleev (1869) He wrote question marks in places where unknown elements would eventually be placed (Mendeleev successfully predicted properties of most of the undiscovered elements) Improved version later- patterns of changing properties repeated for elements across horizontal rows and elements in vertical columns showed similar properties The repeated pattern is an example of periodicity. PERIODICTY : Tendency to recur at regular intervals.

7 Modern Periodic Table Each element has its own block with its name and symbol, atomic number and atomic mass Modern Periodic Table - p. 90-91 English Chemist Henry Moseley (1913) Ordered by atomic number, not atomic mass

8 Modern Periodic Table Atomic number is equal the number of protons in the nucleus Atomic number increases by one as you move from element to element across a row Properties of elements change in an orderly progression from left to right.

9 PERIODIC LAW Physical and chemical properties of the elements repeat in a regular pattern (periodicity) when they are arranged in order of increasing atomic number is known as the


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