1 / 33

The Development of the Periodic Table

The Development of the Periodic Table. Chapter 7 Section 1. Timeline of Development…. Ah Ha! My life has purpose again. 1790’s Antoine Lavoisier: compiled a list of elements (about 23) Mid-1800’s Scientists developed a way to determine atomic mass 1870 About 70 known elements.

kelvin
Download Presentation

The Development of the Periodic Table

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Development of the Periodic Table Chapter 7 Section 1

  2. Timeline of Development… Ah Ha! My life has purpose again • 1790’s • Antoine Lavoisier: compiled a list of elements (about 23) • Mid-1800’s • Scientists developed a way to determine atomic mass • 1870 • About 70 known elements

  3. Organization • Meyer, Mendeleev & Moseley • Mendeleev gets most of the credit • Organized by atomic mass (just as Newlands) but changed columns • Organized into columns with similar properties • Left blank spaces for places where he thought elements should be, but weren’t discovered yet • Table 7.1?

  4. Mendeleev’s Predictions

  5. Why not atomic #? • It was found that some of Mendeleev’s elements were incorrectly placed • Why didn’t he use atomic number instead of atomic mass? • Answer: atomic #’s weren’t discovered until the early 1900’s

  6. Moseley’s Adaptation • After Henry Moseley discovered protons (and atomic number) he changed the organization and fixed Mendeleev’s problems • Periodic Law: • Periodic repetition of chemical and physical properties of the elements when arranged by increasing atomic number

  7. Parts of the Periodic Table Columns = Groups (or families) Rows = Periods

  8. Sections of the PT Transition Elements Inner Transition Elements

  9. Other periodic tables…

  10. Why? • Why do things behave the way they do? • The best predictor/explanation of why elements react are found in: • Their # of electrons • The way their electrons are organized • The size of the atoms • How much they want electrons or how much they want to get rid of electrons

  11. Valence Electrons • Electrons in the outermost energy level of an atom • Core Electrons: all electrons that are not in the valence shell Na 1s22s22p63s1

  12. Shielding constant (# of non-valence electrons) Effective Nuclear Charge Nuclear Charge (# of protons) Electron Shielding • Positives & Negatives are attracted to each other • Effective Nuclear Charge: describes the pull on the electrons by the nucleus Zeff = Z - S

  13. Atomic Size • 50ml + 50ml = ? • Atomic Size • Atoms of different elements have different sizes • What happens to Zeff as we go down a group? As we go across a period?

  14. Atomic Radius • What is it?

  15. Atomic Radius Trend Increases Increases

  16. Increases Increases Atomic Radius Trend • Why? • 1) As you go down a group, principle energy levels are added • (n=1, n=2, n=3) • This increases the radius

  17. Increases Increases Atomic Radius Trend • Why? • 2) As you go across a period: • No energy levels are added • Protons are added

  18. Ionic Radius • Ions: • An atom that has an overall positive or negative charge • Examples: • Cl-1(Chlorine with 17 protons and 18 electrons) • Mg2+ (Magnesium with 12 protons and 10 electrons) • What happens to size when atoms do this?

  19. Ionic Radius Trend • Positive Atoms • To become positive, atoms lose electrons • What happens to size if you lose electrons? • Hint: You now have more positives pulling in less negatives Positive Nucleus

  20. Positive Nucleus Ionic Radius Trend • Negative Atoms • To become negative, atoms gain electrons • What happens to size if you gain electrons? • Hint: You now have more negatives pulling out

  21. Chapter 7 Test • Monday – January 7th • Development of the Periodic Table • Periodic Trends (what & why) • Atomic radius • Ionic radius • Ionization energy • Electron Affinity • Isoelectronic • Ions • Groups of the Periodic

  22. Comparing Atomic Size • Remember isoelectronic • When atoms have the same electron configuration, which one is bigger? • Example: a) Na+ b) F-1 c) O-2 O-2 > F-1 > Na+ Na = +11 F = +9 O = +8 Radius decreases with increasing nuclear charge (# of protons)

  23. Sample 7.6

  24. Ionization Energy • The energy required to remove an electron from an atom • 1st IE: Energy to remove the first electron Na  Na+ + e- • 2nd IE: Energy to remove the 2nd Na+ Na2+ + e- • 3rd IE, 4th IE etc…

  25. Trend in 1st Ionization Energy Increases Hard to steal electrons Increases Easy to steal electrons

  26. IE Equations & Energies • We show the change through an equation: Na  Na+ + e- E=+495 Na+  Na+2 + e- E= +4562 • Why is the 2nd IE so much bigger?

  27. Spikes in IE

  28. Sample 7.7

  29. Electron Affinity • The measure of how much an atom wants to gain an electron • For most atoms, energy is released when this happens • Delta E = negative

  30. Affinity vs Ionization • Ionization energy • Cl  Cl+ + e-DE = 1251 kJ/mol • Electron Affinity • Cl + e- Cl-DE = -349 kJ/mol More negative = more energy given off = more favorable

  31. Electron Affinity Fluorine has the most electron affinity Increases Increases

More Related