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TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table
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TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization

Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table

Page 2: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Periodic Law

• There is a periodic repetition of chemical and physical properties of elements when arranged by increasing atomic number

Page 3: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

The periodic table hasn’t always look like this

Page 4: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

History of the Periodic Table

• End of the 1700’s – less than 30 elements known

• Many elements discovered during 1800’s

• Many experiments done to determine atomic masses

Page 6: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

John Newlands

• 1864: if elements arranged by atomic mass - properties repeat every 8th element

• Law of Octaves – did not work for all known elements

• Key idea was correct: Properties of elements do repeat in periodic way

Page 7: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Mendeleev & MeyerMendeleev produced 1st accepted PT: 1869•Elements ordered by ↑ atomic mass into columns with similar properties•Predicted existence & properties of undiscovered elements•Not totally correct

– more accurate atomic mass calculations showed some elements weren’t in right place

Page 8: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.
Page 9: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Remember

1860’s:

•No subatomic particles yet discovered

•Dalton’s billiard ball model of the atom

Page 10: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

1913 – Henry Moseley

• by 1913, protons & electrons discovered– Neutrons were predicted

• Moseley determined atoms of each element contain unique # protons (= atomic number)

• rearranged Mendeleev’s PT by atomic number instead of mass

• problems with elements in wrong place disappeared

Page 12: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Periodic Table is arranged according atomic number and organized into groups and periods

Page 13: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

COLUMNSGroups/Family numbering (1 18) left to right

TELL US NUMBER OF VALENCE ELECTRONS (KIND OF)

Page 14: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Valence Electrons – electrons in the outer shell

• Chemical behaviour determined by # valence electrons

• Elements with same # valence electrons will have similar chemical properties

–Elements in same column have similar chemical properties

Page 15: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Going Down Column 1:

2-8-18-32-18-8-1Fr7

2-8-18-18-8-1Cs6

2-8-18-8-1Rb5

2-8-8-1K4

2-8-1Na3

2-1Li2

1H1

ConfigurationElementPeriod

Page 16: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Valence Electrons

414 or IVA

313 or IIIA

22 or IIA

11 or IA

Number of Valence Electrons

Group

Page 17: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Names of Families(AKA group A elements)

• Group 1 = Alkali Metals

• Group 2 = Alkaline Earth Metals

• Groups 3-12: Transition metals

• Group 17 = Halogens

• Group 18 = Noble Gases

Page 18: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Transition Metals (in yellow)

• Groups 3 through 12

Page 19: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

form brightly colored salts

Page 20: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Inner Transition Metals

• Lanthanide (rare Earth metals) – can be found naturally on Earth, only 1 is radioactive

• Actinide– all are radioactive, some are made in the lab. INCLUDES Uranium

Page 21: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.
Page 22: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

ROWSPeriod numbering (1 7) top to bottom

TELL US NUMBER OF SHELLS (energy levels)

Page 23: TOIPC: Periodic Table Organization Do Now: take new packet and open up to blank periodic table.

Energy Levels = Row Number• Elements in same row

have same # of principal energy levels