honors chemistry chapter 6
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Honors Chemistry Chapter 6. The Periodic Table. 6.1 Early Attempts @ Classification: Dobereiner & Newlands. 1817 – Johann Dobereiner found Ca , Ba, & Sr had similar props Atomic mass of Sr was ~ midway betw Ca & Ba Grouped them into Triads Found several triads w/ similar props - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT

Honors Chemistry Chapter 6The Periodic Table

6.1 Early Attempts @ Classification:Dobereiner & Newlands1817 – Johann Dobereiner found
Ca, Ba, & Sr had similar props◦Atomic mass of Sr was ~ midway
betw Ca & Ba◦Grouped them into Triads
Found several triads w/ similar propsIn ea triad, the middle elem had
an atomic mass ~ ½ way betw the other 2 elems

6.1 Early Attempts @ Classification:Dobereiner & Newlands1863 – John Newlands arranged
elems in order of atomic mass◦Noted a repetition of similar props
every 8th elem Called this the Law of Octaves

6.2 Mendeleev’s Periodic TableDmitri Mendeleev – also put
elems in a table◦Said props of elems were a function
of their atomic masses◦Felt props occurred after periods
varying in length 7 elems in 1st 2 periods, 17 elems in next
2

6.2 Mendeleev’s Periodic TableMendeleev & Lothar Meyer, working
separately, made an 8 column table of elems◦Mendeleev left blanks in table to group all
elems w/ similar props in the same column Thought elems had yet to be discovered Predicted props & atomic masses of several
elems Eventually discovered & his predictions were
very close◦Said “props of elems are a periodic
function of their atomic masses” – Periodic Law

6.3 Problems w/ Mendeleev’s TableWhen all elems were placed in
order of incr atomic masses, Te & I were in the wrong columns◦If switched, they were in correct
columnsAs more elems were discovered,
other pairs were also switched

6.3 Problems w/ Mendeleev’s TableHenry Moseley found atomic
number of many elems◦Result – periodic law was revised:
The properties of the elements are a periodic function of their atomic number.

6.4 Modern Periodic TableAtomic # gives # of p+’s & # of
e-’sCertain e- arrangements are
repeated periodically◦Elems w/ similar e- configs are
placed in the same column◦Can also list elems in the column in
order of incr principal quantum #This forms the Periodic Table.

Construction of Table:Align elems w/ similar outer e-
configs◦1st 2 elems fill 1st energy level & 1st
row of table◦3rd elem ends in 2s1 – similar to H –
goes under it.◦Be – 2s2 – similar to He, but doesn’t
fill energy level – does not go under it
◦B thru Ne; have e-’s in p sublevel – new columns Ne fills 2nd energy level – goes under He

Construction of Table:Na thru Ar fill 3rd energy level,
make up 3rd rowK & Ca begin 4th energy level –
start 4th row

6.5 Transition ElementsSc begins to fill sublevel – starts
new columnSc thru Zn fill sublevel & head
new columns* Cr & Cu have 1 e- in highest
energy level due to stability of ½ filled & completely filled sublevels
Elements in columns 3-12 (IIIB – IIB)

6.5 Transition ElementsNext 6 elems have e-’s in highest
p sublevel◦Elems in column 18 have 8 e-’s in
outer level (except He)◦Next e- begins a new row

The Lanthanoids & Actinoids- Sometimes called Rare Earth
ElementsLanthanoid Series – La thru Yb
begin filling the 4f sublevel◦*Assume elems have predicted
configs except for ½ filled & complete filled sublevels
Actinoid Series – Ac thru No – fill 5f sublevel

The Lanthanoids & ActinoidsBoth series are placed below the
tablePeriod – all elems in a horizontal
rowGroup – all elems in the same
vertical column

6.7 Octet RuleWhen s & p e-’s are in the highest
energy level of an atom, they are in the outer level◦d & f e-’s can never be in outer level of
neutral atom\ the largest # of e-’s in outer level
is 8◦These 8 e-’s are called an Octet.
An atom w/ 8 e-’s in outer level is considered to have a full outer level

6.7 Octet RuleOctet Rule – an atom w/ 8 e-’s in
their outer level is chemically stable◦He is also considered stable bec. Its out
level is full Can only hold 2 e-’s
It is sometimes possible to force the outer level of an elem in 3rd or higher period to hold more than 8 e-’s◦- Extended Octet
Noble gas comps are formed this way

Surveying the Table: Electron ConfigurationsIn the periodic table, elems w/
similar props are in a columnAn atom’s chemical props are
determined by its e- config◦\ the periodic table is constructed
on the basis of e- config

Surveying the Table: Electron ConfigurationsElems in columns labeled “A”
have their highest energy e- in an outer s or p sublevel◦The coef is the same as the # of the
period

Surveying the Table: Electron ConfigurationsElems in columns labeled “B”
have their highest energy e- in a d sublevel, one level below the outer level◦The coef is 1 less than the period #
Lanthanoids & Actinoids end in f1 – f14 w/ coef 2 less than the period #
Full or ½ full sublevels are more stable than other arrangements

6.9 Metals & NonmetalsGroups 1 & 2 contain the most
active metalsGroup 1 (except H) – Alkali Metal
FamilyGroup 2 – Alkaline Earth Metal
Family

6.9 Metals & NonmetalsNonmetals are on the right side
of the table◦Group 16 – Chalcogen Family◦Group 17 – Halogen Family◦Group 18 – Noble Gases
Metals – hard, shiny & conduct heat & electricity well
Nonmetals – generally gases or brittle solids, dull, insulators

6.9 Metals & NonmetalsElems are classified as metals or
nonmetals on the basis of e- structure.◦Metals have few e-’s in outer level
Tend to lose outer e-’s & form (+) ions when forming compounds
◦Nonmetals have more e-’s in outer level Gain e-’s to form (-) ions when forming
comps May also share outer e-’s w/ other atoms

6.9 Metals & NonmetalsGeneral Rule:
◦3 or less e-’s in outer level – metals◦5 or more e-’s in outer level –
nonmetalsMetalloids – elems which have
props of both metals & nonmetalsStairstep line in table is a rough
dividing line betw metals & nonmental◦Elems that lie along this line are
usually metalloids

6.9 Metals & NonmetalsGroups 13-15 include both
metals & nonmetals◦Top of ea group is nonmetallic◦Metallic character of elem incr
toward the bottom of the table.

6.9 Metals & NonmetalsMetals are on the left side of
table.Nonmetals are on the right side
of table.Most elems are metallic.The most unreactive atoms are
the noble gases◦Chemically stable bec of octet rule.