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Chapter 6 The Periodic Table Lavoisier Dobereiner’s Triads Newland and Mendeleev Modern Periodic Table Section 6.2 Classification of the Elements Group 1 ↓ Vertical columns are called groups. Elements are placed in columns by similar properties. Labeling and Naming Groups Three common methods Traditional – label groups with Roman numerals and letters A or B longer columns on right and left are labelled IA – VIIIA. Shorter columns are labelled IB-VIIIB Some have switched to 1A-8A for long columns and 1B-8B for short columns Label each group 1 -18 (not widely used) Horizontal rows are called periods There are 7 periods Group 1A are the alkali metals Group 2A are the alkaline earth metals Group 7A is called the Halogens Group 8A are the noble gases 1A 2A The elements in the A groups 8A 0 are called the representative 3A 4A 5A 6A 7A elements The group B are called the transition elements These are called the inner transition elements and they belong here Metals, Non-metals, Metalliods Section 6.2 Classification of the Elements Objective: Identify and explain the similarities between valence electron configurations for elements in a group of the periodic table. Electron Configurations and the Periodic Table Valence Electrons the electrons in the HIGHEST energy level for an element Determine the properties of an element EXAMPLE: Br: 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p5 Highest energy level with electrons = 4 7 electrons in energy level 4 = valence electrons Valence Electrons and PERIOD The energy level of an element’s valence electrons = the period number that the element is in EX: Br is in period 4, so its valence electrons are in energy level 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Each row (or period) is the energy level for s and p orbitals. D orbitals fill up after previous energy level so first d is 3d even though it’s in row 4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 3d 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 4f f orbitals start filling at 4f 5f Valence Electrons and COLUMN Representative elements: group number corresponds to the number of valence electrons those elements have (when using the A/B numbering system) EX: Group 1A elements all have an electron configuration that ends in s1, so these elements all have ONE valence electron. Group 6A elements all have an electron configuration that ends in s2p4. These elements all have SIX valence electrons H Li 1 3 Na 11 K 19 Rb 37 Cs 55 Fr 87 1s1 Alkali Metals 1s22s1 1s22s22p63s1 1s22s22p63s23p64s1 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s1 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d10 5p66s1 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d105p6 6s24f145d106p67s1 s-block elements Elements in Groups 1A all have electron configurations ending in s1 and elements in group 2A on the periodic table have electron configurations that end in s2 Groups 1A-2A are s-block elements s-block is only two groups long because s can only hold TWO electrons S- block s1 s2 Alkali metals all end in s1 Alkaline earth metals all end in s2 really have to include He but it fits better later. He has the properties of the noble gases. p-block elements Elements in group 3A have electron configurations ending in p1, elements in 4A have electron configurations ending in p2, etc. Continues through group 8A (Group 3A – 8A or 13- 18 compose the p-block) Because p orbitals can hold 6 electrons, the p-block spans six groups The P-block p1 p2 p3 p4 p5 p6 Noble Gases 1s2 He 2 Ne 2 2 6 1s 2s 2p 10 1s22s22p63s23p6 Ar18 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p6 Kr 36 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d105p6 Xe 54 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d10 Rn 5p66s24f145d106p6 86 d-block elements Transition metals First row of d block is actually 3d (looks like 4d) B Groups or groups 3 – 12 All the elements in group three have an electron configuration that ends in d1, all the elements in group four have a configuration that ends in d2, etc. Transition Metals -d block d1 d2 d3 s1 d5 s1 d5 d6 d7 d8 d10 d10 f-block elements Inner transition metals Spans 14 columns of the periodic table First group of f-block elements have electron configurations that end in f1 F - block inner transition elements f1 f2 f3 f4 f5 f6 f7 f8 f9 f10 f11 f12 f13 f14 Section 6.3 Periodic Trends ] Objective: Be able to identify the major trends among elements in a group or period on the periodic table and explain the reason for the trend. What is a trend? predictable behavior on the periodic table, the properties of an element change in a predictable way Atomic Radius I. Atomic Radius: the distance from its nucleus to its outermost electron (difficult to measure) Atomic Radius A. Atomic size – determined by the distance between the outermost electrons and the nucleus B. Atomic radius – The outermost electrons don’t exist in a definite boundary (electron cloud) Atomic radius = half the distance between nuclei of two of the same element bound together in a compound Atomic Radius EXAMPLE: If two atoms of chlorine are bound together like this: Cl—Cl, the atomic radius of chlorine is approximately half the distance between their nuclei Trend within a Period Atomic radius DECREASES In a period, energy level stays the same and the nucleus gets more protons as we move from left to right MORE positive nucleus PULLS in electrons closer, so it gets SMALLER Atomic Radius DECREASES across a period EXAMPLE: To describe the trend going ACROSS a period, lets look at the atomic structures of C and N (RIGHT next to each other on the periodic table): Carbon (atomic # 6) Nitrogen (atomic # 7) Carbon: 6 protons e- configuration: 1s22s22p2 Nitrogen: 7 protons e- configuration: 1s22s22p3 Trend within a Group Atomic size increases as you move down a group Electrons are in higher energy levels farther from the nucleus as you go DOWN EXAMPLE Li: 1s22s1 Na: 1s22s22p63s1 Na has more electrons, these extra electrons occupy energy levels that are farther away from the nucleus, so the electron cloud of Na is BIGGER Atomic Radii Trend Atomic Size… What is the smallest atom on the periodic table? What is the largest atom on the periodic table? Practice DECIDE WHICH ELEMENT IS BIGGER: 1. Li, Ar 2. Sr, Te 3. Si, F 4. Kr, O 5. Rank from smallest to largest: C, F, Be, Li 6. Rank from smallest to largest: Mg, Si, S, Na ION SIZE TREND ION When an atom loses or gains electrons, it becomes an ION EX: Chlorine has 17 protons (+) and 17 electrons (-). If Cl GAINS an electron, it becomes Clbecause it has 18 electrons and a charge of -1. Magnesium has 12 protons (+) and 12 electrons (-). If Mg looses two electrons it becomes Mg+2 because it has 10 electrons and has a charge of + 2. ION SIZE TREND POSITIVE IONS: Positive ions are smaller than the neutral atoms because they LOOSE electrons they LOOSE electrons ION SIZE TREND NEGATIVE IONS: Negative ions are bigger than the neutral atom because they GAIN electrons Repulsion between electrons increases (electrons don’t like each other) TREND: (SAME AS SIZE) Size of ions INCREASES down a group, DECREASES across a period Metals tend to form positive ions (cations) and nonmetals tend to form negative ions (anions) Ionic Radii Trend Practice Which will be larger, the ion formed by sodium or the neutral sodium atom? Which will be larger, the ion formed by bromine or the bromine atom? Which will be larger, the ion formed by oxygen or the ion formed by fluorine? Which will be larger, the ion formed by calcium or the ion formed by potassium? IONIZATION ENERGY Ionization Energy – Energy required to remove ONE electron from a gaseous atom Measures how strongly the atom holds onto its outermost electrons If the atom has a strong hold on the electrons, will it have a BIG or SMALL ionization energy? If it has a strong hold on its electrons, it will have a LARGE ionization energy It will take A LARGE AMOUNT of energy to steal the electron Which atoms have a strong hold on their electrons?? Which atoms have a strong hold on their electrons?? Octet Rule: atoms want to have a noble gas electron configuration (want 6 electrons in their p orbitals) for their outermost electrons Noble gases are STABLE (every element wants to be stable): Atoms with electrons in their p orbitals ware closer to noble gas configuration (only have to gain a few electrons). These atoms don’t want to lose electrons, want to GAIN! Atoms in the s block want to LOSE electrons because it is easier to lose electrons to get to noble gas configuration. These atoms want to lose electrons. IONIZATION ENERGY TREND TREND: Ionization energy gets BIGGER as you move from left to right across a period Ionization energy gets SMALLER as you move down a group because the electrons are FAR from the nucleus, aren’t held as tightly First Ionization Energy: energy required to remove one electron from an atom Second Ionization Energy: Energy required to remove two electrons from an atom Third Ionization Energy: Energy required to remove three electrons from an atom Which value, the FIRST ionization energy, the SECOND ionization energy, or the THIRD ionization energy do you think has the LARGEST value? Why? The third energy has the highest value because it is harder to take three electrons away from the positive nucleus Practice 1. State whether the following elements are more likely to GAIN or LOSE an electron? a. Cl b. O c. S d. As e. Al** f. C** g. Sr h. Ca i. Mg j. Br Practice 2. Order the following elements from LEAST to GREATEST ionization energy: a. Br, Cl, F b. N, Cl, S, Mg, Na c. K, Rb, S, O d. Br, As, Se ELECTRONEGATIVITY Electronegativity– In a bond between elements SHARE electrons in a bond Electronegativity measures how much an atom HOGS electrons in a bond Elements that want to GAIN electrons are going to hog electrons in a bond ELECTRONEGATIVITY Which elements on the periodic table have a HIGH electronegativity? Which have a LOW electronegativity? Nonmetals Metals have a LOW electronegativity because they want to LOSE electrons to be like the noble gases As you move ACROSS the periodic table, electronegativity INCREASES As you move DOWN the periodic table, electronegativity DECREASES Elements with electrons far from the nucleus don’t want more electrons as much, they don’t feel attracted to the positive nucleus as much ELECTRONEGATIVITY http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZ8izzEq6zI&feature=related Practice Rank the following elements in order of INCREASING electronegativity: 1. P, Si, Al, Cl 2. K, Rb, Cs 3. Pb, Ba, Br, Cl 4. F, N, O