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☰ Search Explore Log in Create new account Upload × Review for Chapter 8: Periodic Relationships Among the Elements 1. Early versions of the periodic table of elements had the elements arranged according to atomic mass rather than atomic number. This was not satisfactory in grouping and explaining the characteristics of the elements. For example, it put argon (atomic mass = 39.95 amu, atomic number = 18) in the place of potassium (atomic mass = 39.10 amu, atomic number = 19) in the periodic table because argon has a greater mass (due to more neutrons) but lower number of protons than potassium. 2. Arranging the elements by atomic number gave a much more useful periodic table. 3. The properties of an element are determined by its electron configuration. The periodic table is arranged by atomic number, which also gives the electron configuration. 4. Valence electrons are the outer electrons of an atom and are the ones involved in chemical bonding. The valence electron configuration directly affects the properties of the atoms of the representative elements. 5. Representative elements are the elements in Groups 1A through 7A. These elements have incompletely filled s or p subshells of the highest principal quantum number, n, for the period. 6. Noble gases are Group 8A elements. With the exception of helium, they have a completely filled p shell. They are not reactive because the outer ns and np subshells are completely filled, a condition that represents great stability. 7. Transition metals are the elements in Groups 1B and 3B through 8B, which have incompletely filled d subshells or produce cations with incompletely filled d subshells. 8. The Group 2B elements (sometimes labelled 12B) (Zn, Cd, Hg) are neither representative elements nor transition metals and have no special name. Their d subshell is completely filled. 9. The lanthanide and actinide series of elements are sometimes called fblock transition elements because the f subshells are being filled. 10. In the formation of cations, one or more electrons are removed from the highest occupied n shell. The electron configuration for some atoms and their cations are: Na: [Ne]3s1 Na+: [Ne] Ca: [Ar]4s2 Ca2+: [Ar] Al: [Ne]3s23p1 Al3+: [Ne] Metals in Groups 1A, 2A, and 3A tend to lose electrons until their electron configurations match that of the noble gas that precedes them in the periodic table as shown above. 11. In the formation of cations from transition metals, electrons are removed from the ns orbital before the (n-1)d orbital even though the orbitals are filled in the reverse order. For example, Mn, which has an electron configuration of [Ar]4s23d5, forms a cation, Mn2+, in which two 4s electrons are removed to form [Ar]4s 03d5 instead of losing two 3d electrons to form [Ar]4s23d3. 12. In the formation of anions, one or more electrons are added to the highest partially filled n shell. The electron configuration for some atoms and their anions are: F: 1s22s22p5 F-: 1s22s22p6 or [Ne] 2 2 4 O: 1s 2s 2p O2-: 1s22s22p6 or [Ne] 2 2 3 N: 1s 2s 2p N3-: 1s22s22p6 or [Ne] The nonmetals in Groups 5A, 6A, and 7A tend to accept electrons until their electron configurations match that of the noble gas that immediately follows them in the periodic table as shown above. 13. Isoelectronic atoms and ions have the same number of electrons and thus the same ground-state electron configuration. For example F-, Ne, and Na+ are isoelectronic with an electron configuration of 1s22s22p6. 14. The concept of effective nuclear charge can be used to explain variations in atomic size and ionization energy. For atoms with 3 or more electrons, the electrons in a given shell are shielded from the positive charge of the protons in the nucleus by electrons in inner shells but not as much by electrons within the same subshell. For representative elements, the effective nuclear charge increases from left to right across a period and from bottom to top in a group. 15. The atomic radius is half the distance between two nuclei in adjacent metal atoms or in a diatomic molecule. Within a period, the atomic radius generally decreases from left to right (Li > Be > B > C > N > O > F > Ne). Within a group, the atomic radius generally increases from top to bottom (H < Li < Na < K < Rb < Cs). Refer to Figure 8.5. 16. The ionic radius is the radius of a cation or an anion. If an atom forms a cation, the ion is smaller than the original atom because one or more electrons have been removed and the electron cloud decreases in size. If an atom forms an anion, the ion is larger than the original atom because one or more electrons have been added and the electron-electron repulsion enlarges the electron cloud. 17. For ions, the ionic radius increases from the top to the bottom of the periodic table within a group. For ions of elements in different groups, a size comparison is meaningful only if the ions are isoelectronic. For example, the ions Na+, Mg2+, and Al3+ are isoelectronic and decrease in ionic radius from left to right across the period: Na+ > Mg2+ > Al3+. This is due to an increase in effective nuclear charge moving from Na+ to Al3+. Refer to Figure 8.9. 18. Within a group on the periodic table, physical properties tend to vary predictably, particularly if the elements exist in the same physical state. For example, the melting point of an element can be estimated from averaging the melting points of the elements immediately above and below it in its group. 19. The ionization energy is the minimum energy required to remove an electron from a gaseous atom in its ground state. The ionization energy is a measure of how “tightly” an electron is held in an atom. Ionization is always an endothermic process. 20. For an atom with more than one electron, each electron has a different ionization energy. The first ionization energy is the energy required to remove the first electron from the atom in its ground state: X(g) + energy(I1) X+(g) + e- . The second ionization energy is the energy required to remove the second electron: X+(g) + energy(I2) X2+ + e- . The third ionization energy is the energy required to remove the third electron: X2+ + energy(I3) X3+ + e-, and so on. 21. More energy is required to remove each successive electron from an atom since the nuclear charge remains constant and the effective nuclear charge increases. Ionization energies always increase: I 1 < I2 < I3 < … 22. The alkali metals (Group 1A) have the lowest first ionization energies. The noble gases (Group 8A) have the highest first ionization energies. First ionization energies tend to decrease from the top of a group to the bottom. First ionization energies tend to increase across a period from left to right but some exceptions exist. See Figure 8.11. 23. Electron affinity is a measure of the tendency of an atom to gain an electron. The definition states that it is the negative of the energy change that occurs when an electron is accepted by an atom in the gaseous state to form an anion: F(g) + e- F-(g) For this reaction, ∆H = -328 kJ/mol, and thus the electron affinity is + 328 kJ/mol. 24. Halogens (Group 7A) have the highest electron affinities. Electron affinity tends to increase from left to right across a period with some exceptions but varies little within a group. See Figure 8.12. 25. Diagonal relationships are similarities in the chemical properties of pairs of elements that are diagonal to each other in the periodic table such as Li with Mg, Be with Al, and B with Si. This is due to a similarity in the charge densities of their cations. 26. The metallic character of elements decreases across a period from metals through the metalloids to the nonmetals. The metallic character increases from top to bottom within a group of representative elements. 27. Metallic oxides are usually basic, nonmetallic oxides are usually acidic, and oxides of intermediate elements (such as Al2O3) tend to be amphoteric (displaying both acidic and basic properties). Download 1. Science 2. Chemistry Review for Chapter 8.doc Unicode Symbol Reference (short) Character Shapes Shown in this Report. Many of the characters ship donation inspection program 5.111 Principles of Chemical Science MIT OpenCourseWare Fall 2008 rms of Use, visit: HW / Unit 2 First Four Rows of the Periodic Table, 428-429 Document Chapter 8 Worksheet 3 Answer Key from 2008 chapter_8_Bo studylib © 2017 DMCA Report