1 / 21

Periodicity

Periodicity. Third Period elements. Atomic Size. The trend The diagram shows how the atomic radius changes as you go across Period 3.

bayle
Download Presentation

Periodicity

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. Periodicity Third Period elements R.B.Mahajan

  2. Atomic Size The trend The diagram shows how the atomic radius changes as you go across Period 3. The increasing number of protons in the nucleus as you go across the period pulls the bonding electrons more tightly to it. The amount of screening is constant for all of these elements because the all of these valence electrons are in 3rd level. R.B.Mahajan

  3. Ionic Radii Ionic radius of cation is less than its atom- one shell is lost & less screening. Ionic radius of anion is more than its atom for the contrary reasons to cation. Let's look at the radii of the simple ions formed by elements as you go across Period 3 of the Periodic Table - the elements from Na to Cl. R.B.Mahajan

  4. Melting Points The chart shows how the melting and boiling points of the elements change as you go across the period. The figures are plotted in kelvin rather than °C to avoid having negative values. R.B.Mahajan

  5. The trend of variation can be explained on the basis of difference in their structures. Sodium, magnesium and aluminum all have metallic structures. In sodium, only one electron per atom is involved in the metallic bond - the single 3s electron. In magnesium, both of its outer electrons are involved, and in aluminum all three. Silicon has a giant covalent structure just like diamond. A tiny part of the structure looks like this: Phosphorus, Sulfur, Chlorine and Argon has following molecular structures R.B.Mahajan

  6. Electrical Conductivities Sodium, magnesium and aluminum are all good conductors of electricity. Conductivity increases as you go from sodium to magnesium to aluminum. Silicon is a semiconductor. None of the rest conduct electricity. The three metals, of course, conduct electricity because the delocalized electrons (the "sea of electrons") are free to move throughout the solid or the liquid metal. In the silicon case, explaining how semiconductors conduct electricity is beyond the scope of A level chemistry courses. With a diamond structure, you mightn't expect it to conduct electricity, but it does! The rest don't conduct electricity because they are simple molecular substances. There are no electrons free to move around. R.B.Mahajan

  7. Electronegativities Electronegativity is a measure of the tendency of an atom to attract a bonding pair of electrons. The Pauling scale is the most commonly used. Fluorine (the most electronegative element) is assigned a value of 4.0, and values range down to caesium and francium which are the least electronegative at 0.7. The trend across Period 3 looks like this: The trend is explained in exactly the same way as the trend in atomic radii. R.B.Mahajan

  8. First Ionisation Energy The first ionisation energy is the energy required to remove the most loosely held electron from one mole of gaseous atoms to produce 1 mole of gaseous ions each with a charge of 1+. It is the energy needed to carry out this change per mole of X. R.B.Mahajan

  9. Notice that the general trend is upwards, but this is broken by falls between magnesium and aluminum, and between phosphorus and sulphur. Explaining the pattern First ionisation energy is governed by: the charge on the nucleus; the distance of the outer electron from the nucleus; the amount of screening by inner electrons; whether the electron is alone in an orbital or one of a pair. R.B.Mahajan

  10. R.B.Mahajan

  11. Reactions with Oxygen Sodium Sodium burns in oxygen with an orange flame to produce a white solid mixture of sodium oxide and sodium peroxide. For the simple oxide: 4 Na + O2 2Na2O For the peroxide: 2Na + O2 Na2O2 Magnesium Magnesium burns in oxygen with an intense white flame to give white solid magnesium oxide. 2Mg + O2MgO R.B.Mahajan

  12. Reactions with Oxygen Aluminum Aluminum will burn in oxygen if it is powdered, otherwise the strong oxide layer on the aluminum tends to inhibit the reaction. If you sprinkle aluminum powder into a Bunsen flame, you get white sparkles. White aluminum oxide is formed. 4 Al + 3O2 2Al2O3 Silicon Silicon will burn in oxygen if heated strongly enough. Silicon dioxide is produced. Si + O2 SiO2 R.B.Mahajan

  13. Reactions with Oxygen White phosphorus catches fire spontaneously in air, burning with a white flame and producing clouds of white smoke - a mixture of phosphorus(III) oxide and phosphorus(V) oxide. The proportions of these depend on the amount of oxygen available. In an excess of oxygen, the product will be almost entirely phosphorus(V) oxide. For the phosphorus(III) oxide: P4+ 3O2 P4O6 For the phosphorus(V) oxide: P4 + 5O2P4O10 Sulphur Sulphur burns in air or oxygen on gentle heating with a pale blue flame. It produces colourlesssulphur dioxide gas. S + O2 SO2 Chlorine and argon Despite having several oxides, chlorine won't react directly with oxygen. Argon doesn't react either. R.B.Mahajan

  14. Reactions with Chlorine Sodium- Sodium burns in chlorine with a bright orange flame. White solid sodium chloride is produced. 2Na + Cl2 → 2NaCl Magnesium- Magnesium burns with its usual intense white flame to give white magnesium chloride Mg + Cl2 → MgCl2 Aluminium- Aluminium is often reacted with chlorine by passing dry chlorine over aluminium foil heated in a long tube. The aluminium burns in the stream of chlorine to produce very pale yellow aluminium chloride. This sublimes (turns straight from solid to vapour and back again) and collects further down the tube where it is cooler. 2Al + 3Cl2→ 2AlCl3 R.B.Mahajan

  15. Reactions with Chlorine Silicon If chlorine is passed over silicon powder heated in a tube, it reacts to produce silicon tetrachloride. This is a colourless liquid which vaporises and can be condensed further along the apparatus Si + 2Cl2 → SiCl4 Phosphorus White phosphorus burns in chlorine to produce a mixture of two chlorides, phosphorus(III) chloride and phosphorus(V) chloride (phosphorus trichloride and phosphorus pentachloride). Phosphorus(III) chloride is a colourless fuming liquid. P4 + 6Cl2 → 4PCl3 Phosphorus(V) chloride is an off-white (going towards yellow) solid. P4 + 10Cl2 → 4PCl5 Sulphur If a stream of chlorine is passed over some heated sulphur, it reacts to form an orange, evil-smelling liquid, disulphur dichloride, S2Cl2. • 2S + Cl2 → S2Cl2 or S + Cl2→ SCl2 Chlorine and argon It obviously doesn't make sense to talk about chlorine reacting with itself, and argon doesn't react with chlorine. R.B.Mahajan

  16. Reactions with Water Sodium- Sodium reacts vigorously with water, melting, giving hydrogen gas leaving strongly alkaline solution of sodium hydroxide. 2Na + 2H2O → 2NaOH Magnesium- Magnesium reacts very slowly with cold water producing weakly alkaline solution with slightly soluble Magnesium hydroxide. • Mg + 2H2O → Mg(OH)2 Hot Magnesium reacts with steam vigorously to form Magnesium oxide and hydrogen gas. • Mg + 2H2O → MgO +H2 R.B.Mahajan

  17. Oxides R.B.Mahajan

  18. Oxides Amphoteric oxide and hydroxide: Al2O3, Al(OH)3. Basic properties:  Aluminium oxide is very resistant to attack by acids and so the first reaction is slow. Aluminium hydroxide reacts easily with dilute acids. Al2O3 (s)  +  6H+ (aq)   "   2Al3+ (aq)+3H2O(l)   Al(OH)3 (s)  +  3H+ (aq)  "   Al3+ (aq)  +  3H2O (l) Acidic properties:  Alkaline attack on aluminium oxide is slow unless the alkali is hot and concentrated or molten. The formula of the aluminate ion shown is accepted in exams; you may also see [Al(OH)4]- or AlO2-, though the latter only really comes from reaction with molten alkali. Al2O3(s) + 6OH – (aq) + 3H2O(l)  "   2 [Al(OH)6]3 –(aq) Aluminium hydroxide reacts readily with sodium hydroxide solution: Al(OH)3 (s)  +  3OH – (aq)   "   [Al(OH)6]3 – (aq) R.B.Mahajan

  19. Oxides Acidic oxides (acid anhydrides) SiO2, P4O10, SO2, SO3, Cl2O. Silicon dioxide, silica. Silica’s giant covalent lattice means it is very resistant to attack; the alkali solution must be concentrated and needs heating. SiO2 (s) +  2 OH – (aq)  "   SiO3 2 – (aq)  +  H2O(l) Phosphorus(V) oxide. The reaction is violent with cold water. P4O10 (s) + 2H2O (l)   "  4HPO3(aq) On heating the solution further reaction occurs forming phosphoric(V) acid: HPO3(aq)  +  H2O(l)   "  H3PO4(aq) Sulphur dioxide: SO2(g)  +  H2O (l)   "  H2SO3 (aq) Sulphur trioxide: This reaction is violent, and is not used directly to make sulphuric acid. SO3(g)  +  H2O (l)  "   H2SO4 (aq) Dichlorine oxide:                         Cl2O (aq)  +  H2O(l)   "  2 HClO (aq) R.B.Mahajan

  20. Chlorides The chlorides we'll be looking at are: NaCl, MgCl2, AlCl3, SiCl4, PCl5, PCl3, S2Cl2 The structures Sodium chloride and magnesium chloride consist of giant ionic lattices at room temperature Aluminium chloride and phosphorus(V) chloride are tricky! They change their structure from ionic to covalent when the solid turns to a liquid or vapour. Melting and boiling points Sodium and magnesium chlorides are solids with high melting and boiling points because of the large amount of heat which is needed to break the strong ionic attractions. The rest are liquids or low melting point solids. Leaving aside the aluminium chloride and phosphorus(V) chloride cases where the situation is quite complicated, the attractions in the others will be much weaker intermolecular forces such as van der Waals dispersion forces. These vary depending on the size and shape of the molecule, but will always be far weaker than ionic bonds. R.B.Mahajan

  21. Chlorides Oxidation number of elements in chlorides, reaction with water R.B.Mahajan

More Related