chapter 5: the periodic law general chemistry

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Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry http://www.ccsdualsnap.com/miscellan.htm

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Page 1: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Chapter 5:The Periodic Law

General Chemistry

http://www.ccsdualsnap.com/miscellan.htm

Page 2: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Review/Link to Previous Learning

• In Chapter 4, we learned about electrons configurations of elements.

• Discovered there is a pattern of electron configurations on the Periodic Table.

• Are there other patterns on the Periodic Table? _____________

• In Chapter 5 we will learn how the Periodic Table is organized.

Page 3: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

CollectionsDo you like to play cards?Do you have a stamp, baseballcard, or comic book collection?How do you organize your collection?

Page 4: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Attempts at Organizing Elements

• Early scientists knew about some properties of elements.

• Is there a characteristic of elements that can organize them?

Page 5: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Dobereiner’s TriadsTHE LAW OF TRIADS:___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

EXAMPLE: Lithium Atomic Mass of 7Sodium Atomic Mass of 23Potassium Atomic Mass of 39

According to Dobereiner’s Law, the atomic mass of sodium Should equal the arithmetic mean of lithium and potassium.(7+39)/2 = 23, which is the mass of sodium.

Page 6: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Problems with Dobereiner’s Law of Triads.

1) ______________________________________________________________________________

2) The law did not work for very low or very highmassed elements such as F, Cl, and Br.

3) As techniques improved for measuring atomicmasses accurately, the law became obsolete.

Dobereiner’s research made chemists look at groups ofelements with similar chemical and physical properties.

Page 7: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Newland’s Law of Octaves

When placed in increasing order of their atomicmasses, __________________________________________________________________________.

Li Be B C N O FNa Mg Al Si P S ClK Ca

Page 8: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Problems with Newland’s Law of Octaves

1) _____________________________________________________________________________.

2) When more elements were discovered(Noble gases) they could not be accommodated in histable.

However, the modern periodic table does draw from theconcept of periods of eight.

Page 9: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Mendeleev and Meyer

• Published nearly identical schemes for classifying elements

• Arranged elements by ______________________• Mendeleev generally given more credit

– Published first– More successful at demonstrating value of table– ______________________________________

______________________________________

Page 10: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Mendeleev’s Table: ______________________________.He arranged the table so that elements in the same columnhave similar properties.

Page 11: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Problems with Mendeleev’s Table:

1) The positions of ________________ could not beaccommodated within the table.

2) In order to make the elements fit the requirements,Mendeleev was forced to put an element of slightlyhigher atomic weight ahead of one of slightly lower atomic weight.

Page 12: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Henry Moseley (1887-1915)

• Developed concept of _________________

– amount of positive charge in the nucleus

• Later determined that arranging periodic table according to ___________________ eliminated problems seen in Mendeleev’s table

Page 13: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Why is it the “periodic” table?

• Periodic Law: when elements are arranged in order of increasing atomic number, ________________________________________________________

Page 14: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Study Buddy Review

• Describe the contribution each person below made to the development of the periodic table:– Johan Dobereiner– John Newland– Dmitri Mendeleev– Julius Meyer– Henry Moseley

Page 15: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Parts of the Periodic Table

Page 16: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Parts of Periodic Table

• Groups/families: vertical columns– __________________1A– __________________2A– Boron, carbon families– __________________ (oxygen family).– pnictogens (nitrogen family)– __________________ (fluorine family): 7A– ___________________8A/0

Page 17: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

• Horizontal rows are called periods

• There are 7 periods

Page 18: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

1A

2A 3A 4A 5A 6A7A

8A0

• The elements in the A groups are called the representative elements

outer s or p filling

Page 19: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Parts of Periodic Table

• Metals: _____________ of staircase

• Nonmetals: __________of staircase

• Metalloids: elements adjacent to staircase (except Al, Po)

Page 20: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

The group B are called the transition metals

These are called the inner transition metals and they belong here

Page 21: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Study Buddy Review

• Identify the follow parts of the periodic table:– Halogens

– family

– Alkali metals

– Metals

– Inner transition metals

– Noble gases

– Metalloids

– Period

Page 22: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Periodic Properties of Elements

Page 23: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Periodic Trends

•Atomic Radius

•Ionic Radius

•Ionization Energy

•Electron Affinity

•Electronegativity

Page 24: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Atomic Radius

•Atomic Radius = ____________________________

___________________________________________

}Radius

Page 25: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry
Page 26: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Trends in Atomic Radius

• Influenced by three factors:1. ________________– More charge pulls electrons in closer.

2. Energy Level– Higher E level _________________________

3. Shielding effect– The number of electrons between electrons and

nucleus affects the pull felt by the outer electrons

Page 27: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Atomic Radius Group trends

• As we go down a group...

• __________________________________________

• so the atoms get bigger.

HLi

Na

K

Rb

Page 28: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Atomic Radius Periodic Trends• As you go across a period, the radius gets

smaller.• ___________________________________

___________________________________

Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar

Page 29: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Atomic RadiusAtomic Radii

0.000

0.050

0.100

0.150

0.200

0.250

3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20atomic number, Z

Ato

mic

rad

ius,

nm

Atomic Radii

Page 30: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Ionic Size

• Ion: electrically charged atom• Cation: __________ charged ion• Anion: ___________ charged ion

• Ions aren't the same size as the neutral atoms they come from. – Compare the sizes of sodium and chloride ions with

the sizes of sodium and chlorine atoms.

Page 31: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

• Positive ions are smaller than the atoms they come from.

• _____________________________________________________________________________________.

• Negative ions are bigger than the atoms they come from.

• Although the electrons are still all in the 3-level, the extra repulsion produced by the incoming electron causes the atom to expand. There are still only 17 protons, but they are now having to hold 18 electrons.

Page 32: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry
Page 33: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Study Buddy Review-A.R., I.R.

• Describe the pattern for atomic radius – As you move across a period– As you move down a column

• What charge does a cation have?

• What charge does an anion have?

• Which is larger than its parent atom, a cation or an anion?

Page 34: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

First Ionization Energy

• Ionization energy __________________________

__________________________________________• Elements want to have the e- configuration like that

of a noble gas (filled)– Column 1A elements have need to _____ one electron to

have noble gas configuration so it is ________ to remove electron

– Column 7A element need to GAIN one electron to have noble gas configuration, so it is HARD to remove electron

Page 35: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

First Ionization Energy vs. Atomic Number

Page 36: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Ionization Energy

Page 37: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Ionization Energy• As you move down

a group ionization energy decreases…

• ________________________________________________________________________________________________

• As you move across

a period ionization energy increases…

• Elements on left of table want to lose electrons to have full energy level (requires low energy to remove electron)

Page 38: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Successive Ionization Energies• more than one electron can be removed

from atoms

• Second Ionization energy: ______________

_____________________________________

• Third Ionization energy: when a third electron is removed from an atom that has already lost two electrons

Page 39: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Symbol First Second ThirdHHeLiBeBCNO F Ne

1312 2731 520 900 800 1086 1402 1314 1681 2080

5247 7297 1757 2430 2352 2857 3391 3375 3963

11810 14840 3569 4619 4577 5301 6045 6276

Sucessive Ionization Energies

Page 40: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Relationship Between Common Charge and I.E.

• Consider Beryllium:– Electron config: [He] 2s2

• Low energy to remove 1st and 2nd electrons

• MUCH higher energy to remove 3rd electron because ______________________________________________________________________

Page 41: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Study Buddy Review-I.E.

• What is ionization energy?

• Describe the pattern for ionization energy as you – Move down a family– Move across a row

• What does “first” ionization energy mean?

Page 42: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Electron AffinityElectron affinity is:

• ______________________________________________________________________

• the more attraction for an electron the energy is released when the atom gains the electron – Released energy is ______________ (-350 kJ)

Page 43: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Electron Affinity

Page 44: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Electron AffinityGeneral Trend:

• ________________ (s2p5 configurations) are most negative electron affinities. They are most likely to want to gain electrons to obtain noble gas configuration

• As you go down a family, electron affinity is ______________(harder to gain electrons with increasing atomic size)

Page 45: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Study Buddy Review-E.A.

• What does it mean when an energy is negative?

• Which elements generally have a very negative electron affinity?

Page 46: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Electronegativity

• As you move down a group, electronegativity ___________

• As you move across a period, electronegativity _____________

Electronegativity: ___________________ ______________________to itself when it is chemically combined with another element.

Which element is the MOST electronegative?

Page 47: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Electronegativity

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

4

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20

atomic number, Z

Electronegativity

Page 48: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Study Buddy Review-Electroneg

• Define electronegativity.

• Describe the pattern for electronegativity as you – Move down a group– Move across a period

• Which element is the most electronegative?

Page 49: Chapter 5: The Periodic Law General Chemistry

Resources• http://www.chemguide.co.uk/atoms/properties/

atradius.html• http://wine1.sb.fsu.edu/chm1045/notes/Periodic/

Affinity/Period05.htm• http://www.webelements.com/• http://www.public.asu.edu/~jpbirk/CHM-

113_BLB/Chpt07/sld017.htm• Jeanette Boles• Tina Lula• Dr. Stephen L. Cotton, Charles Page High School