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The Periodic Table

Discover why the periodic table is vital for chemists, serving as a valuable reference and organizing vast information about known elements. Explore the history, organization, and significance of the periodic table.

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The Periodic Table

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  1. The Periodic Table

  2. Why is the Periodic Table important to me? • The periodic table is the most useful tool to a chemist. • You get to use it as a reference or resource. • It organizes lots of information about all the known elements.

  3. Pre-Periodic Table Chemistry … • …was a mess!!! • No organization of elements. • Imagine going to a grocery store with no organization!! • Difficult to find information. • Chemistry didn’t make sense.

  4. Famous Dreams 1834-1907

  5. HOW HIS WORKED… Put elements in rows by increasing atomic weight. Put elements in columns by the way they reacted. SOME PROBLEMS… He left blank spaces for what he said were undiscovered elements. (Turned out he was right!) He broke the pattern of increasing atomic weight to keep similar reacting elements together. Dmitri Mendeleev: Father of the Table

  6. The current table is organized by increasing Atomic Number. • Metals are on the left and non-metals are on the right. • Metalloids are along the diagonal line that separates them and has properties of both metals and non-metals.

  7. The Current Periodic Table Periods on the periodic table go from left to right. All of the elements in a period have the same number of atomic orbitals. Every element in the top row has oneorbital for it’s electrons. All of the elements in the second row have two orbitals for their electrons.

  8. Review • How many periods are on the periodic table? • How many orbitals would all the elements in period 4 have?

  9. Groups…Here’s Where the Periodic Table Gets Useful!! • Elements in the same group have similar chemical and physical properties!! • (Mendeleev did that on purpose.) Why?? • They have the same number of valence electrons. • They will form the same kinds of ions.

  10. Families on the Periodic Table Families are vertical columnson the periodic table and are grouped by similar chemical properties. Each family has a specific name to differentiate it from the other families in the periodic table. Elements in each family react differently with other elements.

  11. Hydrogen • Hydrogen belongs to a family of its own. • ONE electron • Hydrogen is a diatomic, reactive gas. • Hydrogen was involved in the explosion of the Hindenberg. • Hydrogen is promising as an alternative fuel source for automobiles

  12. Alkali Metals • 1st column on the periodic table (Group 1) not including hydrogen. • Very reactive metals, always combined with something else in nature (like in salt). • Soft enough to cut with a butter knife

  13. Alkaline Earth Metals • TWO electrons • Reactive metals that are always combined with nonmetals in nature. • Several of these elements are important mineral nutrients (such as Mg and Ca • Conduct electricity

  14. Transition Metals • Elements in groups 3-12 Good conductors of heat and electricity • Includes metals used in jewelry and construction. • Metals used “as metal.”

  15. Boron Family • Elements in group 13 • 3 electrons • Most are metals • Aluminum metal was once rare and expensive, not a “disposable metal.”

  16. Carbon Family • Elements in group 14 • Contains elements important to life and computers. • Carbon is the basis for an entire branch of chemistry. • Silicon and Germanium are important semiconductors.

  17. Review • Name three ways groups 1, 2 and transition are used in everyday life?

  18. Nitrogen Family • Elements in group 15 • Nitrogen makes up over ¾ of the atmosphere. • Nitrogen and phosphorus are both important in living things. • Most of the world’s nitrogen is not available to living things. • The red stuff on the tip of matches is phosphorus.

  19. Oxygen Family or Chalcogens • Elements in group 16 • Oxygen is necessary for respiration. • Many things that stink, contain sulfur (rotten eggs, garlic, skunks,etc.)

  20. Halogens • Elements in group 17 • Very reactive, volatile, diatomic, nonmetals • Always found combined with other element in nature . • Used as disinfectants and to strengthen teeth and clean pools.

  21. The Noble Gases

  22. The Noble Gases • Elements in group 18 • Non-reactive, monatomic gases • Used in lighted “neon” signs • Used in blimps to fix the Hindenberg problem. • Have a full valence shell.

  23. Review • Which family is the MOST reactive? • Which family is the LEAST reactive?

  24. Rare Earth Metals • Some are radioactive. • White metals. • Conduct electricity. • Found in the earth.

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