Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W....

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Periodic Table

Transcript of Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W....

Page 1: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Periodic Table

Page 2: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

History

• Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry

• 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads– Three elements with similar properties– Properties followed a pattern– The same element was in the middle of all trends

• Not all elements had triads

Page 3: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Law of Octaves

• 1862 John Newlands developed Law of Octaves

• The elements showed a repetition in their chemical properties after 8 elements

• Used Atomic Weights but not actual values• Important because showed the first pattern of

repeating properties

Page 4: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Julius Lothar Meyer

• Meyer first table published 1864 containing 28 elements

• Arranged in order of Atomic Weight and made a clear horizontal relationship between Atomic Weight and Atomic Volume

• Allowed physical properties to outweigh chemical properties

• Anticipated Mendeleev by years

Page 5: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Meyer

• Left gaps to denote unknown elements• Not willing to make predicitions• More focused on Physical properties not

chemical properties• Bitter battle with Mendeleev• Lost to Mendeleev because of Mendeleev’s

forceful ways

Page 6: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Dmitri Mendeleev

• Mendeleev was known as the “Father of the Periodic Table”

• DOB: 1834-1907• Created the first table on 3-1-1869• Table had 70 elements• Used properties to set up table

Page 7: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

History• Russian scientist Dmitri Mendeleev taught

chemistry in terms of properties• Mid 1800 – atomic masses of elements were

known• Wrote down the elements in order of

increasing mass• Found a pattern of repeating properties• Not first to develop system but his version had

the strongest impact

Page 8: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Mendeleev’s Table• Grouped elements in columns by similar

properties in order of increasing atomic mass• Found some inconsistencies - felt that the

properties were more important than the mass, so switched order.

• Found some gaps• Must be undiscovered elements• Predicted their properties before they were

found

Page 9: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Mendeleev

• Distinguished from competitors by a devotion to, and love for, the individuality of the elements that went hand in hand with an intimate knowledge of their chemical characteristics

• Focused on both physical and chemical properties

Page 10: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Mendeleyev Cont.

• Chemical Properties Used:I. Atomic Weight vs. Valancey• He could only predict these properties• His work preceded chemical advances by 30 years• Produced his table 27 years before the first

subatomic particle, the electron was discovered• Did not predict Noble Gases

Page 11: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Acceptance

• Mendeleev’s table received real acceptance in 1875

• Discovery of Scandium, Germanium and Gallium showed Mendeleev’s predictions were correct.

Page 12: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

“The elements were not being arranged to make a periodic table, but to fit the periodic table”

Page 13: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Meyer vs. Mendeleyev

• Julius Meyer (1830-1895)

• Created a table that plotted:

• Atomic Volume vs. Atomic Weight

• Lost out to Mendeleev

• Published before Meyer• Final Table:• Atomic Weight vs. Valency• Table had 8 columns but

was missing Noble Gases• Discovered 30 years later

Page 14: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Modern Russian Table

Page 15: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.
Page 16: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Spiral Periodic Table

Page 17: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.
Page 18: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.
Page 19: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.
Page 20: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Changing of Table

• Henry Moseley (1887-1915) – changed table in 1913 by increasing atomic number

• Biggest Impact • Glenn Seaborg – rare earth series from Actinium

(89) up.• Current Table Used Today• Minor Changes – inner transitional Lu & Lr

replaced La & Ac • Bohr first linked Quantum Theory

Page 21: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Today’s Table

Page 22: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

More History• First Elements Discovered:1. Carbon2. Sulfur3. Copper4. Gold & Silver5. Iron6. Tin7. Antimony8. Mercury9. Lead10. Oxygen (1772)

• First Classified Groups:1. Gases2. Non-Metals3. Metals4. Earths

Page 23: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

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The Modern Periodic Table• Our current periodic table shows elements in order of

increasing atomic number (#protons)• Elements in the same column have similar properties, and

are called a group or family. Groups are designated in two ways:

1. A Roman numeral (I through VIII) and a letter (A or B)2. An Arabic number (1-18)

• A horizontal row of elements is a period. Elements in the same period have properties that tend to vary in a regular fashion. Periods are designated by an Arabic number (1-7).

Page 24: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Vertical Columns

• Known as Groups or a Family• Elements in same group have similar physical

& chemical properties• Each group is identified by a group number

and group letter

Page 25: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

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Groups and Periods

Figure 2.19Figure 2.19

Page 26: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

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Similar Properties in Groups• Potassium metal reacts

violently with water to producing a basic solution and flammable hydrogen gas.

• All alkali metals react with water to produce hydrogen gas.

Figure 2.21

Page 27: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

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Classification of Elements• Groups

– IA Alkali metals– IIA Alkaline Earth Metals– VIIA Halogens– VIIIA Noble Gases

• Periods• Metals, Nonmetals, Metalloids• Main-group Elements, Transition

Metals, and Inner-transition Metals.

Figure from p. 73

Page 28: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

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Main-Group Elements and Transition Metals

• Main-group elements (also called representative elements) contain any element in the eight groups designated with the letter A. (In the Arabic numbering, groups 1, 2, and 13-18)

• Transition metals contain any element in the 10 groups designated with the letter B. (In the Arabic numbering, groups 3-12)

• Inner-transition metals contain the lanthanides and actinides listed separately at the bottom of the table.

Page 29: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

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Common Group Names• Some groups have descriptive names that are commonly

used instead of their group numbers.– Alkali metals

• Group 1 (IA) metals (hydrogen is a nonmetal)• are considered reactive because the react readily with

other elements and compounds– Alkaline earth metals

• Group 2 (IIA) metals• are more reactive than the transition metals but less

reactive than alkali metals

Page 30: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

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Common Group Names• Some groups have descriptive names that are commonly

used instead of their group numbers.– Halogens

• Group 17 (VIIA) nonmetals• exist naturally as diatomic molecules

– Noble gases• Group 18 (VIIIA) nonmetals• are also called inert gases• are so named because they do not chemically react

with other elements (with the exception of krypton and xenon)

Page 31: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

1A

2A 3A 4A 5A 6A 7A

8A0• The elements in the A groups are called the representative elements

Page 32: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Transition metals

• The Group B elements

Page 33: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

1A 2A

3A 4A 5A 6A 7A

8A

3B 4B 5B 6B 7B 8B 8B 8B 1B 2B

1 2

13 14 15 16 17

18

3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

IA IIA

IIIB

IVB

VB

VIB

VIIB

VIIIB

IIIA

IVA

VA

VIA

VIIA

VIIIA

IB IIB

Other Systems

Page 34: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

• Horizontal rows are called periods• There are 7 periods

Page 35: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

• Group 1A are the alkali metals• Group 2A are the alkaline earth metals

Page 36: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

• Group 7A is called the Halogens• Group 8 are the noble gases

Page 37: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

The group B are called the transition elements

These are called the inner transition elements and they belong here

Page 38: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.
Page 39: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

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Metals, Nonmetals, and Metalloids• The periodic table has many classifications. Groups and

periods are one classification. Another classification denotes metals, nonmetals, and metalloids.– A stair-step line starting at boron (B) separates metals

(to the left of the line) from nonmetals (to the right of the line).

– The metalloids exist along the line. • Metalloids are elements that have physical

properties resembling a metal, but the chemical reactivity of a nonmetal.

Page 40: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Metals

Page 41: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Metals & Their Properties

• Metals are good conductors of heat and electricity

• Metals are malleable• Metals have high luster

Page 42: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Example of Metals• Copper is a relatively soft metal and a very good

electrical conductor

• Mercury is the only metal that exists as a liquid at room temperature

Page 43: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Non-metals

Page 44: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Nonmetals & Their Properties

• Carbon, the graphite in a pencil is an example of a nonmetallic elements

• Nonmetals are poor conductors of electricity

• Can be brittle• Non-lustrous • Many are gases at room temperature

Page 45: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Example of Nonmetals• Sulfur was once known as Brimstone

• Microspheres of phosphorus, a reactive nonmetal

Page 46: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Metalloids or Semimetals

• Properties of both• Semiconductors

Page 47: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Example of a Metalloid

• Silicon is a metalloid• Silicon is brittle like a nonmetal• Silicon has metallic luster• Silicon is a semiconductor of electricity

Page 48: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

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Metals, Nonmetals, and Metalloids

Figure 2.20Figure 2.20

Page 49: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Chapter 2: Atoms, Molecules, and Ions 49

Modern Periodic Table

Elements are divided into two main classes

EOS

Page 50: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Chapter 2: Atoms, Molecules, and Ions 50

Modern Periodic Table

Except for hydrogen, those elements to the left of the line are metals

EOS

Page 51: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Chapter 2: Atoms, Molecules, and Ions 51

Modern Periodic Table

Elements to the right of the line are nonmetals

EOS

Page 52: Periodic Table. History Antoine Lavoisier – Father of Modern Chemistry 1829 German J. W. Dobereiner Grouped elements into triads – Three elements with.

Chapter 2: Atoms, Molecules, and Ions 52

Modern Periodic Table

Elements around the line are referred to as metalloids

EOS