Name ______Date______Hr______
Notes – Atoms & the Periodic Table
Q: What’s an atom?
- The ______that still has all ______
______
______
- EX.
- Brownian motion
- Named after Robert Brown (Scottish botanist).
Q: What does an atom look like?
- An atom is ______
- Atoms have a ______ at their center
- Atoms contain what we call ______.
- 3 subatomic particles:
- Electron ( )
- Location-
- Charge –
- Relative Mass-
- Proton ( )
- Location-
- Charge –
- Relative Mass-
- Neutron ( )
- Location-
- Charge –
- Relative Mass-
Draw a picture of an atom below. Label each of the three subatomic particles, as well as the nucleus and electron cloud.
Q: What is the overall charge of the nucleus in an atom? Why?
Each type of atom has a different number of p+, e-, and n0. We can use the Periodic Table to determine how many of each an atom contains.
Q: What is the Periodic Table?
- Where we can look to find ______
- The table is organized based on ______ such as:
Q: How do I read the periodic table?
- First, you must realize that each box contains information about
______.
- The smaller number (usually at the top) represents the ______
- Tells us how many ______ an atom of that element has
- Tells us how many ______ an atom of that element has
*** Only if the atom is ______
- The larger number (usually at the bottom) represents the ______
- Measured in ______
- Tells us the total number of ______ present in an atom
- How can I use this to find just the number of n0?
- Chemical symbol
- Usually only ______
- Some have ______- these are manmade and will likely get renamed.
- First letter is always ______, second is always ______
- Some symbols are based on the ______ for the element
Ex.
Example: Find the element Bismuth (Bi) on your PT.
Atomic Number:Atomic Mass:
Symbol: / # p+ =
# e- =
# n0 =
1. Atomic Number
- The smaller number with no decimal place
- Represents/determines the number of protons and electrons present in a neutral atom
- increase from top to bottom and from left to right
- If the atomic number is 2, the atom has 2 electrons and 2 protons
- If the atomic number is 10, that atoms has …
- i.e.
Potassium
39.098
K
19
- Potassium has 19 protons and when neutral, 19 electrons.
2. Atomic Mass Number
- is the larger number with a decimal place and is measured in amu (atomic mass units)
- This number gives us the number of p + n in an atom
- To find the number of neutrons, we have a simple formula:
- Mass number – atomic number
3. Chemical symbol
- some have single letters – always capitalized
- some have two letters – first letter always capitalized, second letter is lower-case
- some have three letters – these are all man-made and may get renamed
- some symbols are based on Latin words
- Ex) Aurum – gold – Au Ferrum – iron – Fe
- Any element with an atomic number greater than 92 is man-made (created in a lab)
Why is there usually a decimal place in the atomic mass number?
- It is due to isotopes.
- Isotopes – atoms of the same element with the same # of protons but a different # of neutrons
- the mass number is an estimate of all of the possible isotopes of each element
- example: C-12 has 6 neutrons, C-14 has 8 neutrons – C-12 is more often found in nature so the atomic mass of C is 12.011, which is closer to 12 than 14
How is the periodic table divided?
Into Metals, Nonmetals and Metalloids or into Families and Periods (Rows/Columns).
Types
1. Metals
- are located to the left of the zigzag (exceptions: H and metalloids)
- properties include:
- have luster (shine)
- can be stretched and shaped
- conduct heat and electricity very well
2. Nonmetals
- are located to the right of the zigzag (exceptions: metalloids)
- Properties include:
- dull
- poor conductors of heat and electricity
3. Metalloids/Semi-metals/Semi-conductors
- along the zigzag (B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te, Po)
- Properties include:
- some are shiny, some are dull
- not as good of conductors as metals but better conductors than nonmetals
Families Vs. Periods (Rows versus Columns)
1. Rows/Periods
- are called periods
- are horizontal (side to side)
- elements in the same row/period DO NOT have common properties
- there are 7 of them on the periodic table
2. Columns/Groups
- are called groups or families
- are vertical (up and down)
- elements in the same group/family DO have common properties
- there are 18 of them on the periodic table
- Ex) Li, Na, K all have a similar chemical reaction with water (H2O). They all create an explosion that releases hydrogen gas (H2). Therefore, they are stored with oil, not water.
- Elements in the same group/family have the same number of valence electrons
- Valence electrons – the number of electrons in an atom’s outermost energy level
- Ex) argon (Ar) versus neon (Ne)
- Atoms want to achieve a filled outermost energy level – we call this an “octet” if the energy level contains 8 valence electrons.
Are the groups named?
- Eachfamily of elements group has its own name.
Families
Alkali metals
- Group 1 elements (except H)
- Have 1 valence electron
- Are the most active metals
- Tend to react with group 7 elements (halogens)
Alkaline Earth metals
- Group 2 elements
- Have 2 valence electrons
- Less reactive than alkali metals but are still reactive
- Tend to react with group 6 elements
Transition metals
- group 3-12 on periodic table
- those families that we did not number
- Metals, but different from alkali or alkaline earth metals
- Most have 1 or 2 valence electrons
- Includes mercury (Hg) – the only liquid metal at room temperature
Halogens
- Group 7 elements
- Some are gases, Br is liquid, and some are solids
- Have 7 valence electrons
- Tend to react with group 1 elements (alkali metals)
Noble gases
- Group 8 elements
- He has 2 valence electrons
- Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn all have 8 valence electrons
- Are not reactive since they already achieved an “octet”
- Contribute to less than 1% of earth’s atmosphere
- O2 (21%) and N2 (78%) contribute to most of the atmosphere.
***Rare-Earth Elements
- includes elements at bottom of periodic table (periods 6 and 7)
- first row = lanthanoid series- tend to be metals
- second row = actinoid series – most are manmade (transuranium elements) and radioactive
Names and symbols
- You will become familiar with the most commonly used elements and their symbols
Name Symbol
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Aluminum Al
BoronB
CalciumCa
CarbonC
ChlorineCl
CopperCu
HeliumHe
HydrogenH
IronFe
NitrogenN
Oxygen O
SodiumNa
GoldAu
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Bohr Model
- We can use the periodic table to draw Bohr Models. These are also referred to as planetary models.
- In these models we represent the protons, neutrons, & all the electrons.
- We already know that protons and neutrons are located in the nucleus at the center.
- The electrons are located in the electron cloud in energy levels
- 1st level holds max 2
- 2nd 8e-
- 3rd 18e-
- 2n^2
- Fill in the following diagram: (done w/ students in class)
Lewis (Dot) Diagrams:
- Electron dot diagrams are structures that show the valence electrons as dots
- Valence electrons are the electrons in the outmost shell and can be determined by looking at the group number on the periodic table
- Groups IA – 8A (SKIP THE TRANSITION METALS)
- If an element is in group IA it has 1 electron in its valence shell.
- If an element is in group VA, it has 5 electrons in the valence shell, and so on…
- To draw the diagram:
- Write the symbol down
- Place dots around the symbol, one on each side and then begin to pair them
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