Top Banner
Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii
28

Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Dec 29, 2015

Download

Documents

Cecil Pitts
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Chapter 10

Periodic TrendsDensity

Atomic and Ionic Radii

Page 2: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Density

Page 3: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Density

• Iridium (Z = 77) has the highest density.

• Why not Meitnerium (Z = 109?)

• We can predict that an element is more dense if it is closer to Iridium.

Page 4: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Density

Page 5: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Effective Nuclear Charge (Zeff)

• The effective nuclear charge (Zeff) of an atom is basically how well it is able to hold on to its most loosely held electron.

Page 6: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Atomic radius (radii)

• The atomic radius is essentially the size of an atom.

• The largest atom is Francium (Z = 87).

Page 7: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Atomic Radius

Xylophone monkey

Page 8: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Rank the atoms from smallest to largest

Na, K, O, N

O < N < Na < K

Page 9: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Atomic Radius and Effective Nuclear Charge

• The atomic radius decreases as effective nuclear charge increases.

Page 10: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Effective Nuclear Charge (Zeff)

• The effective nuclear charge of an atom is primarily determined by:

1. The nuclear charge

2. The shielding effect

Page 11: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

The Nuclear Charge (Z)

• Based on the number of protons in the nucleus.– Example: Carbon vs. Nitrogen

Page 12: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

The Nuclear Charge (Z)Carbon Nitrogen

Page 13: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

The Nuclear Charge (Z)• The greater the number of protons in the nucleus

the greater the effective nuclear charge.Carbon Nitrogen

Page 14: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Conclusion: Nitrogen is a smaller atom than carbon because nitrogen has 7 protons to pull in its electrons whereas carbon only has 6.

Carbon Nitrogen

Page 15: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Atomic Radius

Xylophone monkey

Nuclear charge explains why atoms get smaller across a period

Page 16: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Shielding Effect.

• The shielding effect is when electrons between the nucleus and the outermost electrons in an atom shield or lessen the hold of the nucleus on the outermost electrons.

Page 17: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Shielding Effect.

He

Ne

Page 18: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Conclusion: Neon is larger than helium because it has an increased shielding effect from having two energy levels whereas helium only has one energy level.

He

Ne

Page 19: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Atomic Radius

Xylophone monkey

Shielding Effect explains why atoms get larger down a group

Page 20: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Chemical Reactivity

Page 21: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Chemical Reactivity

Page 22: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Chemical Reactivity• Metals tend to lose electrons when reacting.

– Large metal atoms are more reactive.

• Nonmetals tend to gain electrons when reacting.– Small nonmetal atoms are more reactive.

Page 23: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Chemical Reactivity • Metals increase

in reactivity left and down.

• Nonmetals become more reactive up and to the right.

• Most reactive metal is?

• Most reactive nonmetal is?

Fr

F

Page 24: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Ionic Radius

• Ionic Radius is the size of an ion.

Page 25: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Size Change in Ion Formation

Page 26: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Rules for Ionic Radius

• Anions (negative ions) are “always” larger than cations (positive ions).

• Ionic Radius goes by the same rules as atomic radius (ions get larger as we move down and to the left).

• However it is necessary to treat anions and cations separately. (Anions are bigger).

Page 27: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Rank the ions from smallest to largest

K+, N3-, Na+, O2-

Na+ < K + < O2- < N3-

Page 28: Chapter 10 Periodic Trends Density Atomic and Ionic Radii.

Homework

• Worksheet: Density, Atomic and Ionic Radii