Top Banner
The Periodic Table of Elements
30

The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth. Scientists have identified.

Dec 22, 2015

Download

Documents

Osborne Tyler
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: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

The Periodic Table of Elements

Page 2: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

ElementsScience has come

along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.

Scientists have identified 92 Natural elements, and created about 28 others.

Page 3: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

ElementsThe elements, alone

or in combinations, make up our bodies, our world, our sun, and in fact, the entire universe.

Page 4: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Periodic Table

A great deal of information about an element can be gathered from its position on the period table.

Understanding the organization and plan of the periodic table will help you obtain basic information about each of the 118 known elements.

Page 5: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Periodic Table

Page 6: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Metals

Page 7: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of MetalsMetals appear to the left of the dark ziz-zag

line on the periodic table. Most metals are solid at room temperature.

Page 8: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metals

Metals have

luster. This means they are

shiny

Page 9: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metals

Ductilemetals can be drawn into wire.

Page 10: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metals

Malleablemetals can be hammered into sheets

Page 11: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metals

Metals have a high melting point.

They are also very dense.

Page 12: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metals

Conductors Metals are

good conductors of electricity and heat

Page 13: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metals

A chemical property of metal is its reaction with water and oxygen. This results in corrosion and rust.

Page 14: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Nonmetals

Page 15: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Nonmetals

Nonmetals occur to the right of the dark zig-zag on the periodic table. Although Hydrogen is in family 1, it is also a nonmetal. Many nonmetals are gases at room temperature.

Page 16: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Nonmetals

Nonmetals do not have luster; they are dull.

Page 17: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Nonmetals

BrittleNonmetals are

brittle so they break easily. This means nonmetals ARE NOT ductile or malleable.

Page 18: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Nonmetals

Nonmetals have low

density.

Page 19: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Nonmetals

They also have a low melting point. This is why they are poor conductors of heat and electricity.

Page 20: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Metalloids

Page 21: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metalloids

Metalloids can be found clustered around the

dark zig-zag line that separates metals

and nonmetals.

Page 22: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metalloids

Metalloids (metal-like) have properties of both

metals and

nonmetals.

Page 23: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metalloids

Metalloids are solids that can be

shiny or

dull.

Page 24: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metalloids

They conduct

electricity and heat better than nonmetals but not as well as

metals.

Page 25: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Metalloids

Metalloids are

malleable and ductile

Page 26: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.
Page 27: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.
Page 28: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Families

Families in the periodic table share chemical properties because all elements in a family have the same number of valence electrons

This means that all elements in a family bond with other atoms in a similar way.

Page 29: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of MetalsMost metals

have 3 or less valence electrons and therefore are likely to lose these electrons in chemical bonds.

Page 30: The Periodic Table of Elements. Elements  Science has come along way since Aristotle’s theory of Air, Water, Fire, and Earth.  Scientists have identified.

Properties of Nonmetals

Nonmetals have 5 or more valence electrons and therefore usually gain electrons in chemical bonds.