1 / 24

The Periodic Table: Tour of the Periodic Table – Key Terms

The Periodic Table: Tour of the Periodic Table – Key Terms. Main-group elements – ones in s-and p-blocks of the table that are called representative elements because they have a wide range of properties. See Figure 5 on page 124. Key Terms 2.

csilla
Download Presentation

The Periodic Table: Tour of the Periodic Table – Key Terms

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Periodic Table: Tour of the Periodic Table – Key Terms • Main-group elements – ones in s-and p-blocks of the table that are called representative elements because they have a wide range of properties. • See Figure 5 on page 124.

  2. Key Terms 2 • Main group elements have special sub groups like alkali metals (Group 1), alkaline-earth metals (Group 2), halogens (Group 17) & noble gases (Group 18). • See Fig. 6 pg 125 for alkali metals which react with water to make alkaline solutions (pH > 7.0).

  3. Key Terms 3 • Alkali metals can be cut by a knife but lose the newly exposed shiny surface because the metal reacts with H2O & O in the air. • See Table 3 page 125 for their physical properties.

  4. Key Terms 4 • These metals are very reactive because they only have 1 valence electron, and losing it results in a stable electron configuration. • Transition metal – one that bonds with electrons in its inner shell before its outer shell

  5. Key Terms 5 • Ductile – squeezable into wire • Alloy – solid or liquid mixture of 2 or more metals • Lanthanide – member of the rare-earth series with an atomic # bet-ween 58 (cerium) & 71 (lutetium)

  6. Key Terms 6 • Actinide – any element of the actinide series where its atomic number falls between 89 (actinium, Ac) through 103 (lawrencium, Lr)

  7. Tour of the Periodic Table:Things To Do • Locate the different families of main-group elements on the periodic table. • Describe their characteristic properties and relate these to their electron configurations.

  8. Things To Do 2 • Locate other metals on the periodic table. • Describe their characteristic properties and relate these to their electron configurations.

  9. Tour of the Periodic Table – Main Group Elements • S- & p-block elements with regu-lar electron configurations (EC). • Same group = same # of valence electrons whose configurations are ns1 to ns2p6. • Here, n is the series or row #.

  10. Main Group Elements 2 • Row # doubles as the energy level & principal quantum #. • For example, a Row 3 Group 2 element (Mg) would have an EC of 3s2. • Group 16 in this row (Sulfur) would have an EC of 3s23p4.

  11. Main Group Elements 3 • Since these elements are in the s- & p-blocks, their valence electrons occupy s & p orbitals. • Group 2 alkaline-earth metals are slightly less reactive because they have 2 valence electrons.

  12. Main Group Elements 4 • It takes more time and energy to lose 2 electrons than one. • Group 17 Halogens are very reactive because they need only 1 valence electron to have a full outermost energy level.

  13. Main Group Elements 5 • Groups 1 & 17 are alike in needing to move only one valence electron. • However the 1st group loses but the 2nd one gains an electron.

  14. Main Group Elements 6 • Halogens are the most reactive nonmetals & react with metals to form salts like NaCl. • Calcium is the best know alkaline-earth (Group 2) metal; it’s in bone, limestone, marble & teeth.

  15. Main Group Elements 7 • Noble gases in group 18 are mostly unreactive not inert. • They have a full outermost energy levels but can be made to react under extreme circumstances.

  16. Main Group Elements 8 • The strong stability and resultant low reactivity allow special uses like filling blimps. • H is in a solo class because it is the most common element. • H’s used to make ammonia, NH3, which is used to make fertilizer.

  17. Most Elements Are Metals • Study Figure 11 on page 128. • Metals share many properties like being great heat and electricity conductors, ductile & malleable. • Transition metals are in the center of the periodic table, Groups 3-12.

  18. Most Elements Are Metals 2 • Groups of transition metals or d-block elements do not have the same # of valence electrons. • HOWEVER, THE SUM OF THE OUTER d & s ELECTRONS = THE GROUP #. • They can lose 1 to 3 valence electrons, have lower reactivity than Groups 1-2 metals but keep other metal properties.

  19. Most Elements Are Metals 3 • Lanthanides & actinides fill f-orbitals but are placed toward the bottom of the table in two rows to keep the table narrow. • Lanthanides = name of the 1st of these rows because in it elements have atomic #’s that follow lanthanum.

  20. Most Elements Are Metals 4 • Actinides = name because elements in the row beneath lanthanides have atomic #’s that follow actinium. • Left to right in these rows, electrons get added to 4f-orbitals in the lanthanides but 5f ones in the actinides.

  21. Most Elements Are Metals 5 • For actinides, the nuclear structure is more important than electron configuration. • This is because their nuclei are unstable, and as a result they spontaneously break apart & cause radioactivity. • Uranium is the best-known actinide.

  22. Most Elements Are Metals 6 • Some other properties of metals include widely varying melting points with the highest (W, 4322˚C) and among the lowest ones (Hg, -39˚C). • They can be mixed to make alloys that eliminate the disadvantages of the solo metals.

  23. Most Elements Are Metals 7 • For example, brass is Cu & Zn, which is harder than Cu and more resistant to corrosion. • Sterling silver is mostly Ag with a little Cu. • Steel is mostly Fe but has 0.2% - 1.5% carbon atoms & usually tiny amounts of other elements like Mn and Ni.

  24. Most Elements Are Metals 8 • Consider finding an element in nature still in its pure elemental state. • What does this reveal about its reactivity?

More Related