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What is the periodic table?

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Students will trace the development of the modern periodic table of elements. ... There are 18 groups in the periodic table. ... The periodic table is like a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What is the periodic table?


1
What is the periodic table?
2
Learning Objective
  • Students will trace the development of the modern
    periodic table of elements.
  • Students will understand the systematic
    organization of the periodic table.

3
Key Terms
  • group
  • periodic
  • period
  • chemical symbol
  • reactive

4
Chemical Symbols
  • For many years, scientists had to spell out the
    names of all the known elements.
  • However, in the early 1800s, a Swedish scientist
    named Jons Jakob Berzelius created a new system
    of representing elements.
  • This system uses letters called chemical symbols.
  • Chemical symbols are a shortened way of writing
    the names of elements.

5
Chemical Symbols- contd
  • Chemical symbols are created from the name of
    each element.
  • There are usually one or two letters in a
    chemical symbol.
  • The first letter of a chemical symbol is always
    capitalized.
  • If there is a second letter, it is written using
    the lowercase.
  • Some elements have three letters in
  • their chemical symbols.
  • These chemical symbols are
  • temporary until scientists come to
  • an agreement on their
  • permanent names.

6
Arranging Elements
  • By the 1800s, scientists had discovered many
    elements.
  • They began to search for ways to organize these
    elements.
  • In 1869, a Russian chemist named Dmitri Mendeleev
    listed the elements in order of increasing atomic
    mass.

7
  • He noticed that elements with similar properties
    occurred periodically.
  • The word periodic means "to repeat in a certain
    pattern."
  • Based on the pattern he observed, Mendeleev
    arranged the elements in rows in a chart.
  • Elements with similar properties
  • were in the same column of his
  • chart, one under the other.
  • Mendeleev's chart was the first
  • periodic table of elements.

8
The Modern Periodic Table
  • Mendeleev's periodic table had some problems.
  • Some elements did not have properties similar to
    the other elements in the same column.
  • The discovery of atomic numbers, 50 years later,
    by Henry Moseley led to a new table.
  • Arranging the elements in order
  • of increasing atomic number
  • instead of increasing atomic mass,
  • all the elements in the same
  • column had similar properties.
  • This new arrangement is the modern
  • periodic table of elements.

9
Periodic Law
  • The periodic law states that the physical and
    chemical properties of the elements are periodic
    functions of their atomic numbers.

10
Periods
  • The periodic table has seven rows.
  • Each horizontal row is called a period.
  • You can see that Period 1 has only two elements,
    hydrogen and helium.
  • The elements in a period do not have similar
    properties.
  • In fact, the properties of each
  • element in a period change
  • greatly as you move from left to
  • right.

11
Periods - contd
  • However, there is a pattern as you move across a
    period from left to right.
  • The first element in a period is a very active
    solid and the period ends with an element that is
    a very inactive gas.
  • The first period is the only exception.

12
1st period
2nd period
13
Checking Concepts
  • How is the first letter of a chemical symbol
    written?
  • What are the horizontal rows of the periodic
    table called?
  • How are the elements arranged in the modem
    periodic table?

14
Answers
  • As a capital letter
  • Periods
  • By increasing atomic number

15
Groups
  • When a column goes from top to bottom, it's
    called a group.
  • There are 18 groups in the periodic table.
  • Element within the same group have similar, but
    not identical properties. For example, lithium,
    sodium, potassium and the other members of the
    1st group are silver-white shiny metals.

16
Map of Elements
  • The periodic table is like a map of the elements.
  • The position of the element tells about its
    properties.
  • The elements position also tells how reactive it
    is (how likely it is to undergo a chemical
    change)
  • The Periodic Table has 3 main
  • regions
  • Metals on the left (except H which is a
    non-metal)
  • Non-metals on the right (except H which is
    located in the metals)
  • Metalloids in the middle

17
Metals .
Elements that conduct electricity and heat well
and have a shiny appearance
18
Alkali Metals
  • Group 1
  • Very reactive
  • Include sodium and potassium

19
Alkaline Metals
  • Group 2
  • More reactive than all metals except Alkali
    metals
  • Includes Calcium and Magnesium

20
Transition Metals
  • Group 3-12
  • Includes copper, gold, silver and iron.
  • Less reactive than most other metals.
  • Used to make jewelry and coins because they dont
    react
  • Sometimes found in foods
  • Important in industry and technology.
  • Often combined to form alloys .

21
Rare Earth Metals
  • Metals shown on the top row of the two rows shown
    on the outside of the main body of the periodic
    table.
  • Referred to as Lanthanides
  • Hard to isolate in a pure form

22
Rare Earth Metals - Continued
  • Actinides
  • Radioactive and some are not found in nature.
  • Some of the elements with higher atomic numbers
    have only been made in labs.

23
Non-metals
  • Properties are opposite of metals
  • Most are gases
  • Poor conductors of heat and electric current
  • Includes nitrogen and oxygen
  • 2 groups are halogens and noble gases

24
Halogens
  • Found in group 17
  • Very reactive that form compounds called salts
    with many metals
  • Used to kill harmful organisms
  • Includes chlorine and iodine

Noble Gases
  • Found in Group 18
  • Almost never react with other
  • elements
  • Include Neon, Krypton and Argon
  • Always a Gas

25
Metalloids
  • These elements have properties of both metals and
    nonmetals.
  • Most common metalloid is silicon
  • Used to make semiconductors found in electronics
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