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Year 11 Chemistry: Chapter 3 ~ The Periodic Table 3.1 Why is that Periodic Table important? ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ Mendeleev’s periodic table was an inspired development. Not only did it organise the information gathered on the basis of patterns of chemical properties and behaviour, but it also proved to be a useful tool for predicting and guiding future developments in Chemistry. Knowing the properties of particular elements and trends within the table, chemists can comprehend what would otherwise be an overwhelming collection of disorganised experimental observations. 3.2 Why are Element Properties Periodic? Mendeleev proposed his periodic law: The properties of elements vary periodically with their atomic weights. To understand the reason for the periodicity of element properties, lets have a look at the alkali metals (group ) and the halogens (group ). Group 1 (I) _______ metals are all relatively soft and highly reactive with water and oxygen. List the group 1 metals and their electronic configurations (subshell): Element Name Element Symbol Electronic Configuration Lithium Sodium Potassium Rubidium Cesium * They all have one electron in an s-subshell. Group 17 (VII) ________ are all coloured and are also highly reactive, especially Fluorine and Chlorine. List the Group 17 halogens and their electronic configuration (subshell): Element Name Element Symbol Electronic Configuration Fluorine Chlorine Bromine Iodine * They all have the configuration s2p5 as the outer shell. The electrons in the outer shell of an atom are known as the valence electrons. The arrangement of electrons in atoms is responsible for the periodicity of element properties. List some properties that the outer-shell electrons in an atom are responsible for: Variations of the chemical properties of elements across a period and similarities down a group are all associated with the electronic configurations of their atoms. Patterns in Electronic Structure Vertical columns are called __________ , and elements have similar outershell electronic configurations. Horizontal rows are called _______ . The number of the period is the same as the number of the outer-shell. Blocks of Elements There are four main blocks in the periodic table: __________ contains Group 1 (alkali metals) and Group 2 (alkaline earth metals): half fill or fill ________ . _________ contains elements in Groups 13-18 (III – VIII): ________ These are the two main blocks. Exceptions: Hydrogen: _______________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ Helium: __________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ _________ contains the transitional metals. The d-subshells are filled only after the s-subshell of the next shell has been filled: __________________ _________ contains the lanthanides (___ ) and actinides (___ ). Uranium is the last element to been found naturally occurring on Earth. The transuranic (atomic numbers higher than 93) elements have been created in a laboratory. QUESTIONS: 1c, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 & 17. 3.3 Trends in Properties Atomic Properties The properties of radius, ionisation energy and electronegativity all depend on the strength of the attraction between the __________________ and the _________. Define ‘electronegativity: ___________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ This attraction will depend on: the ___________ charge that attracts the outer-shell electrons. The distance of the ___________ from the nucleus. *Annotate the diagrams below: ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________ Core Charges *Draw: fig3.9 Moving down a group, the core charge remains __________ but the number of electron shells ____________. The outer-shell electrons are therefore held less strongly. The electrons in atoms of elements in the same period are located in the same outer shell. Moving across a period, as the core charge ____________ the outer-shell electrons are pulled more and more _________ towards the atom’s nucleus. Metallic and non-metallic Character Elements on the right side of the table are ___________ . Other elements are ___________. As you move left to right the elements become _______ metallic and exhibit more ___________ properties. There is no variation in metallic character within ________. Metalloids: _______________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ Germanium, silicon, arsenic and tellurium. Chemical reactivity of the elements Reactivity of Metals:~ *Look at Table 3.2 and the periodic table: Discuss Metals in group 1 are ________ reactive than those in group 2. Down a group, the reactivity of the metal in water ___________ . This trend in reactivity can be explained in terms of the changes in atomic size and ionisation energy. When metals react they tend to form _________ions (_________) ~ by donating one or more of its valency electrons to other ________. The metal atom with the _________ first ionisation energy will require the least energy to donate electrons ~ therefore tend to be the ________ reactive. Reactivity of Non-metals The halogens are in a similar boat to the group 1 metals. The reactivity of halogens decrease from period 2 to 5. This can be explained in terms of the changes in atom size and electronegativity. The Noble Gases The elements in Group 18 (group VIII) are called ____________. They are all very ___________ gases. They all have very _______ melting and ________ temperatures All are ______ at room temperature. HELIUM BOILS AT -269°C , 4°C ABOVE ABSOUTE ZERO The lack of reactivity of these elements arises from the arrangement of electrons in their atoms. Element Name Symbol Electronic configuration Helium Neon Argon Krypton Nobel gases have been known to form compounds with fluoride ions. QUESTIONS: 3.4 Compounds Compounds are formed when atoms of two or more elements chemical combine in fixed proportions. Each compound has its own characteristic set of properties, which are quite different from those of the elements it contains. Example: Sodium Chloride ( ____ ) ~ common salt, always contains 39.3% Sodium and 60.7% of Chlorine, by mass, no matter is our sample is 1g, 2g, 5g or even 10kg. The properties tell us something about the particles present and the strength of the forces between the particles. A large number of compounds that are metal and nonmetal combined ( _______ compound) have similar characteristics of sodium chloride. Sodium Metal Chlorine Non-metal Sodium Chloride Ionic compound Summarise properties of the compound __________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ Molecule: is two or more non-metal atoms chemically combined. Example H2O. *Can you think of any others? _________________________________________ They have similar properties Hydrogen Oxygen Water Non-metal Non-metal Covalent molecule Summarise properties of the compound __________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ QUESTIONS: 11, 12, 13, 14, 26, 27 & 29. KEY TERMS & CHAPTER OUTCOMES (don’t worry about: actinides & lanthanides) Chapter 4 ~ Relative Atomic Mass and Mole * There will be a test after this chapter. 4.1 Masses of particles Relative Isotopic mass Dalton estimated relative atomic weights based on a value of one unit for the hydrogen atom. In 1961 it was decided that by the International Union of Pyysics and Chemistry that the most common isotope of carbon, 12C, would be used as the reference standard, therefore given the relative mass of exactly 12 units. The relative isotopic mass (___) of an isotope is the mass of an atom of that isotope relative to the mass of an atom of 12C as 12 units exactly. Chlorine: There are two different atoms ( __________ ) of the element chlorine. Compared to carbon-12 their weights are 34.969 (35Cl) and 36.966 (37Cl). Naturally occurring chlorine is made up of 75.80% of the lighter isotope and 24.20% (relative abundance) of the heavier isotope. This composition is virtually the same no matter the source. Relative isotopic masses of elements can be obtained using an instrument called the ____________________. It produces a graph called __________________ . Mass Spectrum The number of peaks = number of __________ . Position of each peak on the horizontal axis designates relative isotopic mass. The relative heights of the peaks corresponds to the relative abundance of the isotope. EXTENSION: E1a&b ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ Relative Atomic Mass A naturally occurring sample of an element contains the same isotopes in the same proportions, regardless of its source. An average weight of the atom can be calculated using the relative isotopic masses with their abundances known as ______ _____________ and is given the symbol _______ . *The relative atomic mass of an element is, therefore, the weighted average of the relative masses of the isotopes of the element on the 12C scale. Example: Imagine taking 100 atoms from a sample of chlorine – there will be 75.80 atoms of 35Cl and 24.20 atoms of 37Cl. Therefore relative atomic mass of 100 atoms = The average relative mass of one chlorine atom = (relative isotopic mass X abundance) + (relative isotopic mass X abundance) + ….. 100 Therefore: The relative atomic mass of chlorine is _______ Or more simply Ar(Cl) = ______ What do you notice: Example: Boron has two isotopes. Calculate the Relative Atomic mass. Show all steps. Isotope 10 B 11 B Relative Abundance (%) 19.91 80.09 Relative isotopic mass 10.013 11.009 Example: Copper has two isotopes. 63Cu has a relative isotopic mass of 62.95 and 65 Cu has a relative isotopic mass of 64.95. The relative atomic mass of copper is 63.54. Calculate the percentage abundance of the two isotopes. *HINT: Let x be the % abundance of 63Cu, So (100-x) must be % abundance of 65Cu. Relative Molecular Mass The relative molecular mass ( ____ ) of a compound is the mass of one molecule of that substance relative to the mass of a 12C atom, which is ____ exactly. Example: Relative molecular mass of atmospheric oxygen (O2). Oxygen (O2): Mr(O2) = 2 x Ar(O) = 2 x 16.0 = 32.0 Relative molecular mass of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). *For non-molecular compounds (ionic etc), the term relative __________ mass is used. Example: Find the relative formula mass of Sodium chloride (NaCl). QUESTIONS: E1, 1, 2, 3, 4, 19, 21, 22 & 24.