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Organizing the Elements Purposes: Organize the known elements such that it became easy to learn chemical and physical properties. Create a tool that could predict the existence of elements yet to be discovered. What He Did: Organized known elements by increasing atomic mass. Elements with similar properties were placed in the same group. Left blank spots where possible undiscovered elements would logically fit based on mass, physical and chemical properties. Supporting Evidence: Table allowed the successful prediction of gallium (eka-aluminum) and other undiscovered elements. Problems: Some elements would fit in groups by mass but not by properties, and vice versa. See Te and I Organized by increasing atomic number (not mass). Elements with similar properties are in the same group (vertical column). Periods (horizontal rows) are of varying length of increasing atomic number. Property patterns repeat with each row. Weighted average of the masses of all known isotopes of a given element. Measured in atomic mass units: u or amu 1 amu is 1/12 the mass of a carbon-12 atom. Metals Left side of the periodic table. Conduct electricity and heat well. Tend to be malleable. Tend to be solid at room temperature. Tend to lose electrons in chemical reactions. Nonmetals Right side of the periodic table. Do not conduct heat and electricity well. Tend to be brittle or gaseous at room temperature. Tend to gain electrons in chemical reactions. Metalloids Located on stair-step line between metals and nonmetals. Have properties that are transitional from metals to non metals. Elements commonly referred to as metalloids Boron (B) Silicon (Si) Germanium (Ge) Arsenic (As) Antimony (Sb) Tellurium (Te) Polonium (Po) Astatine (At) Elements in a group have similar properties because they have the same number of valence electrons. Helium (2 valence electrons) is in the same column as neon (8 valence electrons) because both have full outer energy levels. This gives them similar properties. 1 valence electron Reactivity increases from top to bottom of group. Francium would be the most reactive element in this group (if it didn’t radioactively decay so quickly). 2 valence electrons Differences in reactivity are shown by the ways they react with water. Reactivity increases down the group. 1 – 3 valence electrons. Electrons are filling the d-sublevel (instead of s or p). d-sublevel electrons are often delocalized and can be made to flow in certain directions. Makes elements good conductors of electricity. 3 valence electrons Aluminum is the most abundant metal in Earth’s crust. 4 valence electrons Except for water, most of the compounds in your body contain carbon. Carbon can normally bond up to four times. 5 valence electrons Nitrogen and phosphorus are used in fertilizers. 6 valence electrons Oxygen is the most abundant element in Earth’s crust. 7 valence electrons Fluorine is the most reactive element in this group AND on the periodic table. 8 valence electrons (except for 2 in helium) Gases are colorless, odorless, and extremely unreactive. This is due to the highest energy level being full (8 electrons, except for helium).