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Periodic Trends
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Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Periodic Trends

Page 2: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Periodic Trends

• What is a trend?• A trend is the general direction in which

something tends to move.

Page 3: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Periodic Trends

• The elements on the Periodic Table of Elements show many trends in their physical and chemical properties.

• Across the rows (periods or series)

• Down the columns (groups or families)

Page 4: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Atomic Radius

• ½ the distance between the nuclei of 2 like atoms in a diatomic molecule

• The atoms of the 8 main groups are shown here.

Page 5: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Atomic Radius - Groups

• Atomic radius increases as you move down a group

• Why?• More electrons in more

Principal Energy Levels• Atomic size increases

Page 6: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Atomic Radius - Periods

• Atomic radius decreases as you move across a period

• Why?• (-) electrons increase, but so do (+) protons !!!• Increased (+) nuclear charge pulls the (-)

electrons closer to the nucleus• Atomic size decreases

Page 7: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Atomic Radius - Periods

• The size trend in periods is less pronounced than in groups because of the electron shielding effect.

Page 8: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Shielding Effect

• Reduction in effective nuclear charge on an electron that is caused by the repulsive forces of other electrons between it and the nucleus

• In an atom with one electron, that electron experiences the full charge of the positive nucleus. However, in an atom with many electrons, the outer electrons are simultaneously attracted to the positive nucleus and repelled by the negatively charged electrons.

Page 9: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Atomic Radius - Graph

Page 11: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Atomic Radius

Page 12: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Ionic Radius

• What are ions?• Ions are charged atoms,

either + or -• Cations are positive ions• Cations form when atoms

lose electrons • Anions are negative ions• Anions form when atoms

gain electrons

Page 13: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Ionic Radius

Page 14: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Ionic Radius – Cations Group

• Cations are smaller than their parent atoms.

• Why?• By losing their valence

electrons, they lose their entire valence shell

• Cations are formed by the metals on the left side of the Periodic Table

Page 15: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Ionic Radius – Cations Groups

• Ionic size increases as you move down a group for the same reason atomic size increases

• Number of principal energy levels increases

Page 16: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Ionic Radius – Anions Groups

• Anions are larger than their parent ions

• Why?• When extra (-) electrons are

added, extra (+) protons are NOT added to the nucleus

• Effective nuclear attraction is less for the increases number of electrons

Page 17: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Ionic Radius – Anions Group

• Ionic size increases as you move down a group for the same reason atomic size increases

• Number of principal energy levels increases

• Cations are formed by nonmetals on the right side of the Periodic Table

Page 18: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Ionic Radius - Periods

• Just like their parent atoms…• Cations get smaller as you move from left to

right• Anions get smaller as you move from left to right• Increased (+) nuclear charge pulls the (-)

electrons closer to the nucleus

Page 19: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Ionic Radius

Page 20: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Ionization Energy

• Energy is needed to remove an electron from an atom

• The energy needed to overcome the attraction of the nuclear charge and remove an electron (from a gaseous atom) is called the Ionization Energy

Page 21: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

1st Ionization Energy

• The energy needed to remove the 1st electron from an atom is the 1st Ionization Energy

Page 22: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Factors AffectingIonization Energy

• Atomic Radius• Smaller atoms hang on

to valence electrons more tightly, and so have higher ionization energy

Page 23: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Factors AffectingIonization Energy

• Charge• The higher the positive

charge becomes, the harder it is to pull away additional electrons

• Second ionization energy is always higher than the first

Page 24: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Factors AffectingIonization Energy

• Orbital Type• It's easier to remove

electrons from p orbitals than from s orbitals, which are “deeper”

Page 25: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Factors AffectingIonization Energy

• Electron Pairing• Within a subshell,

paired electrons are easier to remove than unpaired ones

• Reason: repulsion between electrons in the same orbital is higher than repulsion between electrons in different orbitals

Page 26: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Factors AffectingIonization Energy

• Electron Pairing – Example• On the basis of gross periodic

trends, one might expect O to have a higher ionization energy than N. However, the ionization energy of N is 1402 kJ/mol and the ionization energy of O is only 1314 kJ/mol.

• Taking away an electron from O is much easier, because the O contains a paired electron in its valence shell which is repelled by its partner.

Page 27: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

1st Ionization Energy

Page 28: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

2nd, 3rd, 4th Ionization Energies, etc.

• Subsequent electrons require more energy to remove than the first electron

• How much more energy is needed depends on what energy levels and orbitals the electrons are in

Page 29: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

2nd, 3rd, 4th Ionization Energies, etc.

• Source: http://chemed.chem.purdue.edu/genchem/topicreview/bp/ch7/ie_ea.html

Page 30: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Ionization Energy

• Click on source to see a short video.

• Source: http://cwx.prenhall.com/petrucci/medialib/media_portfolio/text_images/047_IonizationEner.MOV

Page 31: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Electronegativity

• Ability of an atom to attract electrons toward itself in a chemical bond

Page 32: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Electronegativity• The difference between the electronegativities of

two atoms will determine what kind of bond they form

• Linus Pauling used an element's ionization energy and electron affinity to predict how it will behave in a bond.

• The more energy it takes to pull off the outer electron of an atom, the less likely it is to allow another atom to take those electrons. The more energy the atom releases when it gains an electron, the more likely it is to take electrons from another atom in bonding. These two energies were used to compute a numerical score.

Page 33: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Electronegativity - Periods

• Electronegativity increases going left to right across the periodic table.

• Fluorine's high nuclear charge coupled with its small size make it hold onto bonding electrons more tightly than any other element. Lithium has a lower nuclear charge and is actually larger than fluorine. Its valence electron is not tightly held and it tends to surrender it in chemical bonds.

Li Be B C N O F

1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0

Page 34: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Electronegativity - Groups

• Electronegativity decreases going down a group

• The bonding electrons are increasingly distant from the attraction of the nucleus

H 2.1

Li 1.0

Na 0.9

K 0.8

Rb 0.8

Cs 0.7

Fr 0.7

Page 35: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Electronegativity

Page 36: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Electronegativity

Page 37: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Electron Affinity

• The electron affinity is a measure of the energy absorbed when an electron is added to a neutral atom to form a negative ion.

• Most elements have a negative electron affinity. This means they do not require energy to gain an electron; instead, they release energy.

• Atoms more attracted to extra electrons have a more negative electron affinity.

• The more negative the value, the more stable the ion is.

Page 38: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Electron Affinity

• Click on source to see a short video.

• Source: http://cwx.prenhall.com/petrucci/medialib/media_portfolio/text_images/049_ElectrAffinity.MOV

Page 39: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Electron Affinity

• Electron affinity is essentially the opposite of the ionization energy.

Page 40: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Electron Affinity - Trends

• Click on source to see a short video.

• Source: http://cwx.prenhall.com/petrucci/medialib/media_portfolio/text_images/050_PeriodElectron.MOV

Page 41: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Image Sources

• http://www.Chem4kids.com

• http://images.encarta.msn.com

• http://antoine.frostburg.edu

• http://www.webelements.com

• http://cwx.prenhall.com

• http://www.800mainstreet.com

• http://intro.chem.okstate.edu/1215

Page 42: Periodic Trends. What is a trend? A trend is the general direction in which something tends to move.

Credits

• PowerPoint: Adela J. Dziekanowski