The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had...

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The Periodic Table

Transcript of The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had...

Page 1: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

The Periodic Table

Page 2: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Introduction to the Periodic Table

By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named.In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements in order of increasing atomic mass and found that elements with similar properties fell into groups.Moseley improved the periodic table by arranging the elements according to atomic number instead of atomic mass.

Page 3: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Modern Periodic Table

Contains seven period or rows of elements whose properties change gradually and eighteen groups or columns, each with a family of elements having similar properties.

Page 4: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Organization of Periodic Table

Groups 1 and 2 along with groups 13 to 18 are called the representative elements.Groups 3 to 12 are called the transition elements.

Page 5: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Metal

Has lusterConducts heat and electricityIs malleable and ductile

Page 6: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Nonmetals

Are usually gases or brittle solids at room temperature

Page 7: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Metalloids

Shares properties with metals and nonmetals

Page 8: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Symbols

Are abbreviations usually based on the element’s name

Page 9: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Representative Elements

Groups 1 and 2 are active metals found in nature combined with other elementsAlthough hydrogen is placed in Group 1, it is not a metal and it shares properties with Groups 1 and 17

Page 10: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Alkali Metals

Silvery solids with low densities and low melting pointsThey increase in reactivity from top to bottom of the periodic table

Page 11: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Alkaline Earth Metals

Are denser, harderHave higher melting pointsAre slightly less active than alkali metals in the same period

Page 12: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Groups 13 through 18

May contain metals, nonmetals, or metalloids in solid, liquid, or gas form.The boron family elements in group 13 are all metals except boron, which is a metalloid; these elements are used in a variety of products.

Page 13: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Carbon Group

Elements are all metalloids or metals, except carbon itselfCarbon is found in all living things and exists in several forms.Silicon and germanium are used in electronics as semiconductors.Tin an lead are used in many products.

Page 14: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Nitrogen Group

Contains nitrogen and phosphorusWhich are required by living thingsWhich are used in industry

Page 15: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Oxygen Family

Contains oxygen and sulfurWhich are essential for lifeUsed to manufacture many products

Page 16: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Halogen Group

Elements from salts with sodium and with other alkali metals

Page 17: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Noble Gases

Rarely combine with other elementsThey are often used in lighting and inflating balloons.

Page 18: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Transition Elements

Groups 3 to 12 are metalsMost are combined with other elements in oresThe iron triad is composed of iron, cobalt, and nickelThey are used in many applicationsSeveral transition elements can be used as catalysts, substance that make a reaction occur faster.

Page 19: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

Inner Transition Elements

Are called lanthanides and actinidesThe lanthanides are soft metals and were once thought to be rare.All the actinides are radioactive; several are synthetic elements that do not occur naturally.Dental materials are sometimes made of new composites, resins, and porcelains.

Page 20: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

What does reactivity mean?9F Reactivity in chemistry

But an element might react very quickly with one chemical and hardly at all with another. So is it reactive or not?To compare the reactivity of different elements, we might see how easily they react with oxygen.

Some metals corrode in minutes out on the bench.

Others take longer to corrode, unless you heat them.

Elements that are reactive readily take part in reactions with other chemicals.

Page 21: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

9F The Gold Cup again?

We can list metals in order of how quickly they react with oxygen.

This ranking of metals according to reactivity is called the reactivity series.

speed of reaction with oxygenleast reactive

most reactive

Page 22: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

What if we react different metals with acid?

9F Reaction of metals with acid

copper – no bubbles, no reaction with acid magnesium – the metal reacts quickly with the acid,

producing lots of bubbles

iron – the metal reacts slowly, producing a few bubblessodium – the metal bursts into flames, a very strong reactionlead – the metal reacts very slowly, producing very few bubbles

Page 23: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

9F What about water?

We can also rank metals by their reaction with water.

Compare with the reactivity series for oxygen and acid.

The reactivity series is very useful. How can we learn it?

reactivity series with

oxygen acid water

potassium

sodiummagnesiumzincironleadcoppergold

potassiumsodiummagnesiumzincironleadcoppergold

potassium

sodiummagnesiumzincironleadcoppergold

Page 24: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

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Chapter 4 Properties and Changes of

Matter

Section 1 – Physical and Chemical Properties

Section 2 – Physical and Chemical Changes

Pages 104 - 129

Page 25: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

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Physical Property

Characteristic that CAN be observed WITHOUT changing the composition of the substance.Appearance – properties detected by sensesState - can be liquid, solid, or gas

Page 26: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

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Physical Property cont…

Volume, mass, and density – measurements that describe physical propertiesMelting point & boiling point are physical properties of a substanceBehavior – the way some substances behave

Page 27: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

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Chemical Property

Characteristic that CANNOT be observed without altering the substanceAbility to burnTendency to rustReaction to other substances such as acids

Page 28: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

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Physical Change

Form or appearance of matter changes, but composition stays the sameShape can change, but substance does notExample: Dissolving a solid into a liquidChanging states through vaporization, condensation, sublimation, or deposition does not change the composition of matter.

Page 29: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

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Chemical Change

Results in a change in the substance’s compositionColor can changeOdor sometimes changesFormation of gas or precipitation of a solidEnergy is gained or released during a chemical changeChemical changes are NOT easily reversed.

Page 30: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

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Big Difference

Chemical changes DO alter the composition of substancesPhysical changes DO NOT alter the composition of substances

Examples: water freezes or evaporates – amount of matter stays the same -> physical changeWood burns – ashes, smoke, and gases still total the same amount of matter -> chemical change.

Page 31: The Periodic Table. Introduction to the Periodic Table By 1830 fifty-five different elements had been isolated and named. In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements.

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Law of Conservation of Mass

Particles of matter are not created or destroyed as the result of physical or chemical changes.