Petrucci • Harwood • Herring • Madura GENERAL CHEMISTRY Ninth Edition Principles and Modern Applications Chapter 9: The Periodic Table and Some Atomic Properties Dr. Juana Mendenhall Assistant Professor Morehouse College Lecture 1 Slide 1 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Objectives 1 2 3 4 5 Define and locate periods, groups, families, and transition elements on the periodic table Define & explain metals and nonmetals and their ions Define atomic size and indicate factors that influence atomic size, such as covalent, ionic, metallic, and van der Waals radii 1 Indicate the trends that affect atomic size using the periodic table Define and indicate ionization energy and relate trends using the periodic table Define electron affinity & relate trends to the periodic table Slide 2 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Classifying the Elements: The Periodic Law and the Periodic Table 1869, Dimitri Mendeleev Lother Meyer When the elements are arranged in order of increasing atomic mass, certain sets of properties recur periodically. Slide 3 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Mendeleev’s Periodic Table 1871 — = 44 — = 68 — = 72 —= Slide 4 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 100 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Periodic Law States that the physical & chemical ppts of the elements vary with atomic number Slide 5 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Alkali Metals The Periodic table Alkaline Earths Halogens Noble Gases Main Group Transition Metals Main Group Slide 6 of 35 Lanthanides and Actinides General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Trends in electron configurations Group 1A Li [He]2s1 Group 2A Valence electrons: outer electrons of an atom Be [He]2s2 Mg [Ne]3s2 Ca [Ar]4s2 Na [Ne]3s1 K [Ar]4s1 Rb [Kr]5s1 Sr [Kr]5s2 Cs [Xe]6s1 Ba [Xe]6s2 Fr [Rn]7s1 Ra [Rn]7s2 Slide 7 of 35 that are involved in chemical bonding General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Metals and Nonmetals and Their Ions Metals Good conductors of heat and electricity. Malleable and ductile. Moderate to high melting points. Nonmetals Nonconductors of heat and electricity. Brittle solids. Some are gases at room temperature. Slide 8 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Metallic Character Increase Slide 9 of 35 Increase Increase in non-metallic character General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Metals Tend to Lose Electrons Slide 10 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Nonmetals Tend to Gain Electrons Slide 11 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Electron Configurations of Cations and Anionsof Some Ions Cations Anions Na [Ne]3s1 Na+ [Ne] H 1s1 H- 1s2 Ca[Ar]4s2 Ca2+[Ar] F 1s22s22p5 F- 1s22s22p6 Al[Ne]3s23p1 Al3+ [Ne] Slide 12 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Sizes of Atoms and Ions Physical properties such as density, melting point, and boiling point are related to size of atoms. Atomic radius: is one-half the distance b/w the two nuclei in two adjacent metal atoms; elements that exist as diatomic molecules the atomic radius is one-half the distance b/w the nuclei of the two atoms in a particular molecule Slide 13 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Atomic Radius Increase Increase Slide 14 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Screening and Penetration Zeff = Z – S Z is nuclear charge & S is the shielding constant Zeff2 RH 2 n En = Slide 15 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Ionization Energy Ionization energy: measures how strongly an atom hold its electrons. Ioniziation energy is the minimum energy required to remove an electron from the ground state of the isolated gaseous atom. First Ionization energy, I1, is the energy needed to remove the first e- Mg(g) → Mg+(g) + e- I1 = 738 kJ Second Ionization energy, I2, is the energy needed to remove the second electron Mg+(g) → Mg2+(g) + e- Slide 16 of 35 I2 = 1451 kJ 2 Z I = RH eff n2 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 First Ionization Energy, I1 Increase Increase Slide 17 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Electron Affinity Measures the energy change (attraction or affinity) that occurs when an electron is accepted by atom in the gaseous state. F(g) + e- → F-(g) EA = -328 kJ F(1s22s22p5) + e- → F-(1s22s22p6) Li(g) + e- → Li-(g) EA = -59.6 kJ We assign a (-) value to the electron affinity when energy is released. The more (-) the EA, the greater the tendency the atom can accept an eSlide 18 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 First Electron Affinities Slide 19 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Second Electron Affinities O(g) + e- → O-(g) EA = -141 kJ O-(g) + e- → O2-(g) EA = +744 kJ Slide 20 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Magnetic Properties Diamagnetic atoms or ions: All e- are paired. Weakly repelled by a magnetic field. Paramagnetic atoms or ions: Unpaired e-. Attracted to an external magnetic field. Slide 21 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Paramagnetism Slide 22 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007 Periodic Properties of the Elements Slide 23 of 35 General Chemistry: Chapter 9 Prentice-Hall © 2007