DVD: USING THE PERIODIC TABLE
(NOTES)
January 7, 2014
- Over 100 elements have been discovered
- Each element has a unique set of properties and behaviors.
- Periodic table used to identify the similarities and differences of elements
- If you know the location of an element on the periodic table you can determine their properties and how they will react.
- Dmitri Mendeleev: 1869 organized first periodic table
- Group/family are vertical
- Undiscovered elements have empty spaces
- Rows called periods
- The first period Hydrogen (H) and Helium (He)
- Light, colorless, odorless, tasteless at room temperature
- Make up most of the universe (9 out of 10 elements in universe are H, the rest are He)
- H makes the sun and stars shine
- nuclear reaction, releases tremendous energy and produces He
- Key Point: Nuclear reactions
- Key Point: Chemical reactions involve electrons
- Dot structures (valence electrons)
- Hydrogen (H) has one electron (one dot)
- Helium (He) has two electrons (two dots)
- Period one elements have one energy level and can hold a maximum of two electrons.
- When an energy level is full, it is stable
- When an energy level is not full, it is unstable
- He does not react with other elements and stable
- H forms many bonds
- Second Period
- Gradual transition from shiny, solid metals to gaseous non-metals
- Key Point: metals get harder and less reactive from left to right and nonmetals get more reactive from left to right
- Lithium, lightest and softest, reacts with air and water
- Beryllium less reactive, most toxic elements
- Key Point: metalloid is an element with a blend of metallic and non-metallic properties.
- Boron (B) less reactive than Be
- carbon atoms bond to one another indefinitely
- example, diamond
- Nitrogen (N) (diatomic, gas, non-metal)
- Oxygen (O) (diatomic, gas non-metal) reactive and highly flammable
- Fluorine (F), (gas, non-metal) highly reactive, can form explosive compounds
- Neon (Ne), (unreactive gas, on-metal)
- electron arrangement determines reactivity
- have second energy level
- Key Point: only electrons in the valence shell (level) are involved in chemical reaction.
- valence electrons are shown as dots around the symbol
- valence electrons determine the reactivity of an element
- Key Point: Every period ends with a noble gas
- most reactive elements Li and F
- noble gases are non-reactive
- most reactive elements are closest to noble gases on the table
- Trends of metal reactivity
- 75% of elements are metals
- The easier it is for an element to loose electrons, the more reactive it is
- smaller atoms, easier to loose electrons
- group one electrons loose one electron
- Key Point: Ionization energy is the energy required to pull electrons away from an isolated atom.
- groups two looses two electrons
- Alkali Metals (group/family 0ne)
- Never found uncombined in nature
- Need to be stored in oil or gas to avoid reactivity
- The lower the element on the table, the more violent the reaction (more reactive)
- Alkali Earth Metals (group/family two)
- React slower than group one
- used in fireworks
- metals share valence electrons (sea of electrons)
- harder than group one
- Key Point: semiconductors only conduct electricity at high temperatures
- Group 13 (aluminum Group)
- All group 13 react and release lots of energy
- low melting points
- Group 3-12 Transition metals
- Elements differ in properties
- There is not pattern because of partially filled levels
- don’t have a pattern in valence electrons
- Group 14 Carbon Family
- C does not conduct electricity in diamond form, covalent bonds (nonmetal)
- atoms react like a metal if the electrons are easier to pull
- as the elements go down in the group, the more metallic its behavior (same for groups 13-16)
- Location of elements is based on its behavior and properties
- Group 13-16
- Elements become more metallic as they go down on the table.