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Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table
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Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table

Page 2: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Atoms

• Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements

• Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of the element

• Make up elements, which combine to make up compounds

Page 3: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Elements• Elements are abbreviated in scientific

shorthand – first letter or two of element’s name

Page 4: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Latin Names

Element Symbol Latin nameCopper Cu cuprumGold Au aurumLead Pb plumbumMercury Hg hydrargyrumPotassium K kaliumSilver Ag argentumSodium Na natriumTin Sn stannum

Page 5: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

OrganicElement

TraceMetal

Page 6: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Example

Page 7: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Compounds

• Def: two or more elements combined, pure substance.

Page 8: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Example

Page 9: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Example 2

Page 10: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Example 3

Page 11: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.
Page 12: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Structure of the Atom

• Nucleus:– Protons– Neutrons

• Electrons

Page 13: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Atomic Structure

Page 14: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Protons

• Much larger and heavier than electrons

• Protons have a positive charge (+)

• Located in the nucleus of the atom 

Page 15: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Neutrons

• Large and heavy like protons

• Neutrons have no electrical charge

• Located in the nucleus of the atom 

Page 16: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Electrons

• Tiny, very light particles

• Have a negative electrical charge (-)

• Move around the outside of the nucleus

Page 17: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Particle Symbol Charge RelativeMass

Electron e- 1- 0

Proton p+ + 1

Neutron n 0 1

Subatomic Particles

Page 18: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Atomic Structure10-13 cm

10-8 cm

Page 19: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Atom Models

• Scientist use scaled-up models to represent atoms.– Early models of atoms used a solid sphere– Current electron cloud model shows

electrons traveling in specific energy levels around a nucleus of protons and neutrons.

Page 20: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Early Model

Page 21: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Electron Cloud ModelExample 1

Page 22: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Electron Cloud Model: Example 2

Page 23: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Masses of Atoms

• (1) Atomic Mass

• (2) Isotopes

• (3) Ions

Page 24: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Atomic Mass

• Definition: Composed mostly of the protons and neutrons in the nucleus.

• Unit of measurement for atomic particles is atomic mass unit (amu), which is 1/12 the mass of a carbon atom.

• Atomic Number: this is also the number of protons in an atom

• Mass Number: The sum of the number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom

Page 25: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

11

Na

Atomic Number

Symbol

Atomic Numberon the Periodic Table

Page 26: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

11

Na

11 protons

Sodium

Proton Numberidentifies an Element

Page 27: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Reading Elements onthe Periodic Table

Mass number = number of protons + number of neutrons

Page 28: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Quick Check

A. Nitrogen

1) 5 protons 2) 7 protons 3) 14 protons

B. Sulfur

1) 32 protons 2) 16 protons 3) 6 protons

C. Barium

1) 137 protons 2) 81 protons 3) 56 protons

Page 29: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Calculating Subatomic Particles

16 31 65 O P Zn

8 15 30

8 p+ 15 p+ 30 p+

8 n 16 n 35 n8 e- 15 e- 30 e-

Page 30: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Isotopes

• Definition: Atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons

Page 31: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Isotopes

Page 32: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Isotopes

• Different isotopes have different properties

• The number of protons for a given atom never changes.

• The number of neutrons can change. 

• Two atoms with different numbers of neutrons are called isotopes

Page 33: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.
Page 34: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Isotopes of Chlorine

35Cl 37Cl17 17

chlorine - 35 chlorine - 37

Page 35: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Quick Check

Naturally occurring carbon consists of three isotopes, 12C, 13C, and 14C. State the number of protons, neutrons, and electrons in each of these carbon atoms.

12C 13C 14C 6 6 6

#p _______ _______ _______

#n _______ _______ _______

#e _______ _______ _______

Page 36: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Answer Key

12C 13C 14C 6 6 6

#p 6 6 6

#n 6 7 8

#e 6 6 6

Page 37: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Quick CheckAn atom of zinc has a mass number of 65.

A. Number of protons in the zinc atom

1) 30 2) 35 3) 65

B. Number of neutrons in the zinc atom

1) 30 2) 35 3) 65

C. What is the mass number of a zinc isotope

with 37 neutrons?

1) 37 2) 65 3) 67

Page 38: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Ions

• An atom that carries an electrical charge is called an ion

• If the atom loses electrons, the atom becomes positively charged (because the number of positively charged protons will be more the number of electrons). Also called Cation

• If the atom gains electrons, the atom becomes negatively charged. Called Anion

Page 39: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Ions (continued)

• The number of protons does not change in an ion

• The number of neutrons does not change in an ions

• So, both the atomic number and the atomic mass remain the same.

Page 40: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

This atom has lost an electron. Now it has one more proton than electron.

One more proton means one more positive charge.

This makes the total charge of the atom POSITIVE.

This atom has gained an electron. Now it has one less proton than electron.

One less proton means one less positive charge.

This makes the total charge of the atom NEGATIVE.

Ion Illustration

Page 41: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.
Page 42: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

The Periodic Table

• Elements are organized to their properties in a chart called the Periodic Table.

• Elements are arranged in order of increasing atomic number.

• Periods – Horizontal Rows

• Groups – Vertical Columns

Page 43: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Groups

• Groups share similar properties

• Elements of the same group have the same number of electrons in their outermost shell (energy level).

• Energy Shells has a maximum number of electrons. Level 1: 2 e-. Level 2: 8 e-.

• Each row in the table ends when an outer energy level is filled.

Page 44: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Valence and Shells

Page 45: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Periods

• Horizontal rows of elements that contain increasing number of protons and electrons.

• Elements are classified as metals, non-metals, or metalloids.

• Elements are synthesized in laboratories all over the world.

• Notes: H and He are the building blocks of other naturally occurring elements

Page 46: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Trends in the Periodic Table• Metals

– Alkali Metals– Alkali Earth Metals– Transition Metals– Other (Rare) metals

• Metalloids– Semi-conductors

• Non-metals– Halogens– Other Non-metals– Noble Gas

Page 47: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.
Page 48: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Properties of Metals

• Conduct heat and electricity• Luster – reflect light well• Malleable – can be hammered or rolled

into sheets• Ductile – can be drawn into wire• Ionic Bonding – when combined with

non-metals• Metallic Bonding – ions are sliding layers

and electrons are weakly held

Page 49: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Alkali Metals

• Group 1: Soft, white, low-density, low-melting, highly reactive metallic elements

• Highly reactive with oxygen and water

• Uses:– Human Health: sodium, potassium– Photocells– Francium – a radioactive element which

breaks down giving off particles and energy

Page 50: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Alkali Earth Metals

• Group 2: Not found naturally in elemental form; two electrons in outer energy level. Much less reactive than Alkali Metals

• Uses:– Strontium and magnesium found in fireworks– Magnesium in vehicles, ladders and bats– Calcium in statues and countertops– Barium in disease diagnoses– Radium formerly used in cancer treatment

Page 51: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Transition Metals

• Group 3-12: They are characterized by multiple valences, colored compounds, and the ability to form stable complex ions.

• Often occur in nature as uncombined elements

• Uses:– Chromium – colored compounds, found in

rubies and emeralds– Iron – widely used, main ingredient in steel

Page 52: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Transition Metals (Continued)

• Uses:– Cobalt and nickel – used in some steels– Nickel – used to coat other metals– Copper – used in electric wiring– Silver – used in photographic film, jewelry– Gold – used in jewelry– Zinc and cadmium – used to coat and plate

other metals– Mercury – only room temperature liquid metal

Page 53: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Other / Rare Metals

• Any metal that is difficult to extract from ore and is rare and expensive commercially

Page 54: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Properties of Metalloid

• Between Metal and Non-metal

• Greek metallon = "metal“ and eidos = "sort".

• Form ionic and covalent bonds

• Have some metallic and some non-metallic properties

• Partial conduction give them “semiconductor” characteristics.

Page 55: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Semi-conductor

• Silicon in particular, which conducts electricity under certain conditions

• Computer chips and other electronic devices.

Page 56: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Properties of Non-Metals

• Usually gases or brittle solids at room temperature

• Not malleable or ductile• Poor conductors of heat and electricity• Usually not lustrous (shiny)• Form ionic bond when combined with

metals• Form covalent bond with another non-

metal

Page 57: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Hydrogen

• Most common element in the universe

• Diatomic molecule - H2

• Highly reactive element found mostly on Earth as part of water compound

Page 58: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Halogen

• Group 17: Pure halogens exist as diatomic molecules, and they are highly reactive with Alkali Metal to form salt.

• Examples: bromine, iodine, fluorine, chlorine.

• Uses:– Chlorine – disinfectant and bleach– Bromine – dyes in cosmetics– Iodine – hormone regulation, disinfectant

Page 59: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Noble Gas

• Group 18: They are monatomic (isolated) and chemically stable (inert). Also called inert gas.

• Uses:– Helium – used in blimps and balloons– Neon, argon, and krypton – used in lights

Page 60: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Atomic RadiiIncreasing Atomic Radius

Incr

easi

ng

Ato

mic

Rad

ius

Page 61: Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table. Atoms Unit of all matter, building blocks of elements Smallest piece of matter that has the properties of.

Atomic Radii

• Atomic Radii increase as you go down the group with increasing atomic number.

• Atomic Radii decrease as you go across the period with increasing atomic number. As proton number increases from left to right, the attraction to the nucleus becomes greater.

• Francium (Fr) is therefore the element with the largest atomic radius.