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The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends
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The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Dec 30, 2015

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Matilda Shields
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Page 1: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

The Periodic Table

Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families,

Periodic Trends

Page 2: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

• Modern periodic table arranged in order of increasing atomic number.

Periodic Properties of the Elements

• 1869: Dmitri Mendeleev and Lothar Meyer publish identical tables. Mendeleev gets the credit and becomes “Father of Periodic Table”.

• 1913: Henry Moseley develops concept of atomic numbers.

Page 3: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.
Page 4: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Characteristics of Metals

• Most elements are metals Have a shiny luster; most are silvery

• All solids at room temperature except Hg

• Are malleable (thin sheets) and ductile (wires)

• Many have a very high melting point (1900°C for chromium)

• Good conductors of heat and electricity

• Form cations

• Metal + nonmetal = ionic cmpd

Page 5: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Characteristics of Nonmetals

• Do not have luster; various colors• Poor conductors of heat and electricity• Melting points are generally lower than those of

metals• May be solids, liquids, or gases at room temp• Have high electron affinity; form anions• Compounds of nonmetals with metals are ionic• Compounds with only nonmetals are molecular

Page 6: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Characteristics of Metalloids

• Include the elements B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te, At• Form the division line between metals and

nonmetals on the periodic table

• Have intermediate properties. • Si and Ge are used in integrated circuits and computer chips.

Page 7: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Parts of Periodic Table

• Representative elements: Group A elements

• Transition elements: Group B elements (d-block)

• Inner Transition (Rare Earth) elements (f-block)

• Group 1A: Alkali metals; Group 2A: Alkaline Earth metals; Group 6A: Chalcogens; Group 7A: Halogens; Group 8A: Noble Gases

Page 8: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Hydrogen

• Does not belong to any group

• Diatomic gas at RT

• Metallic at extreme pressures

• Usually forms covalent bonds

• Hydrogen ion (1+ charge) or hydride ion (1- charge)

Page 9: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

What is Electron Shielding?

• Core e-’s shield or screen outer e-’s from the full charge of the nucleus.

• Electrons in the same shell repulse each other.

• Electrons in any orbital will partially shield an e- in any other orbital.

Page 10: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

What Determines Effective Nuclear Charge (Zeff)?

• The Zeff felt by outer electrons is determined by: Zeff = proton # - core electron #

• Effective nuclear charge increases as nuclear charge increases.

• Effective nuclear charge decreases as the e- moves farther from the nucleus.

Page 11: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Periodic Trend 1: Atomic Radius

Atomic radius decreases

up a family (bottom to top

of periodic table).

WHY? Lower-numbered

energy levels are closer to the nucleus.

Atomic radius decreases

across period from left to right.

WHY? Shielding stays

constant across a period so Zeff increases. Electrons move closer to the nucleus

Page 12: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.
Page 13: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Periodic Trend 2: Ionic Radius

CATIONS Radius of a cation is

smaller than its parent atom.

WHY?a. Outermost electrons

leave to form a cation.b. New outermost

electrons are in a lower energy level, closer to the nucleus.

ANIONSRadius of an anion is larger

than its parent atom.

WHY? a. Electrons are added to

outer shell to form an anion.

b. More electron-electron repulsion.

Page 14: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.
Page 15: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Ionic Radius Trend Up a

Family

Cation radii decreaseup a family (bottom to

top).

WHY?Atomic radii decrease up

a family, and cations are smaller than their parent atoms.

Follows same pattern as atomic radius!

Anion radii decreaseup a family (bottom to

top).

WHY?Atomic radii decrease

up a family, and anions are larger than their parent atoms.

Follows same pattern as atomic radius!

Page 16: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.
Page 17: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Ionic Radius Trend Across

a Period• The ionic radius trend changes across a

period as we move from metals to nonmetals.

• The radii of metallic ions decrease while the radii of nonmetallic ions increase across a period.

• This causes a wave-like pattern on the table.

Page 18: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Ionization Energy

• Ionization Energy is the minimum amount of energy needed to remove an electron from the ground state of an isolated gaseous atom or ion. Formation of cations!First Ionization Energy (I1) removes the first electron from a neutral atom:

Na(g) Na+(g) + 1e-

Second Ionization Energy (I2) removes the second electron from an ion:Na+(g) Na2+(g) + 1e-

*** The greater the ionization energy,the more difficult it is to remove an

electron.

Page 19: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Variations in Successive Ionization Energies

• Ranking of ionization energy:

• Every element shows a large increase in ionization energy when electrons are removed from its noble gas core.

I1 < I2 < I3

Page 20: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.
Page 21: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Periodic Trend 3: Ionization Energy

Ionization energy increases as we go up a family (bottom to top).

Ionization energy increases as we go from left to right across a period.

WHY? As atom gets

smaller, it is harder to remove electrons because they are more attracted to the nucleus.

WHY? As Zeff increases

and the atom gets smaller, it is harder to remove electrons.

Page 22: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.
Page 23: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.
Page 24: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.

Periodic Trend 4: Electronegativity

• Electronegativity: the ability of atoms in a molecule to attract electrons to itself. Greater electronegativity = greater ability to attract electrons.Values from 0.7 for Cs to 4.0 for F.Metals are least electronegative, halogens most electronegative.

Page 25: The Periodic Table Metals, Nonmetals, & Metalloids, Families, Periodic Trends.