Title: Unit One Chemistry
1The Modern Periodic Table
- Unit One Chemistry Horsham College
Chapter 4 VCE Chemistry
2Periodic Table Development
- No chemistry textbook, classroom, lecture theatre
or research laboratory is complete without a copy
of the periodic table of the elements. - Chemists attempted to arrange the known elements
in ways that revealed similarities between them. - However, it required the genius of Mendeleev to
see that arranging elements into patterns was not
enough - He realised that there was a natural plan in
which each element has its allotted place, and
this applies not only to the known elements but
to some that were still undiscovered. - Today there are 111 elements recognised by IUPAC,
and these are usually displayed in the form of a
matrix called a periodic table.
3What Patterns?
- Before the 1800s, scientists and alchemists did
not consider the idea of patterns occurring
between the known elements. - Elements were considered unique and unrelated to
any other element. - Scientists who suggested that patterns may exist
were ridiculed. - Sodium and Potassium were discovered in the early
1800s. Both have very similar properties. - Empirical evidence later suggested that elements
could be sorted in order of increasing atomic
weight
- Elements were found to have repeating patterns.
This is known as the periodic law. - The advancing knowledge of the atomic model
furthered chemists knowledge of elemental
properties.
4Early classification -Antoine Lavoisier of 1789
- Antoine Lavoisier's 1789 classification of
substances divided substances into four 'element'
groups. - The list contained substances that could not be
broken down further. - Acid-making elements Sulphur, Phosphorus,
charcoal - gas-like elements Light, caloric (heat), oxygen
- metallic elements cobalt, mercury, tin, copper,
nickel, iron, gold, lead, silver, zinc,
manganese, tungsten, platinum - earthy elements lime, magnesia, barytes, azote,
argilla, silex - Lavoisier also formed the basis for the modern
list of elements.
5Döbereiners Triads
- In 1829, German Johann Döbereiner discovered that
groups of elements with similar chemical
properties such as Lithium, Sodium and Potassium
had a strange similarity. - The average of the atomic weight of Lithium and
Potassium was the same as the atomic weight of
Sodium. - The middle element in the triad had properties
halfway between the properties of the other two. - This pattern was replicated with Calcium,
Strontium and Barium as well as Sulphur,
Selenium, and Tellurium and also Chlorine,
Bromine and Iodine. - In addition, the densities of some of the triads
followed the same relationship. - These groups became known as "Döbereiner's
triads".
Ca Sr Ba (40 137) 2 88
40 88 137
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7The Cylinder of Elements
- In 1862, Frenchman Alexandre de Chancourtois
published a cylindrical arrangement of the
elements (Also called the telluric screw). - The elements, based on Oxygen-16, differed by 16
in their atomic weight. - Like Döbereiner, Chancourtois cylinder received
little attention.
8The Law of Octaves
- English Chemist, John Newlands discovered that
every eighth element had similar properties. - He called this the law of octaves (Analogy with
music). - Newlands developed a table in which he placed
elements with similar properties in the same
collum. - Unfortunately, his table was ridiculed by the
Royal Society in 1864.
- However, while successful for some elements,
Newlands' law of octaves failed for two reasons - It was not valid for elements that had atomic
masses higher than Ca. - When further elements were discovered, such as
the noble gases (He, Ne, Ar), they could not be
accommodated in his table.
9John Newlands
10Questions 4.1
- Complete questions 1-4 on P. 72 of Nelson VCE
Chemistry.
11Mendeleev and Meyer
- Russian Dmitri Mendeleev and German Julius von
Meyer went on to independently develop their
versions of the periodic law. - Both chemists produced remarkably similar results
at the same time working independently of one
another. - Therefore, there has been some disagreement about
who deserves credit for being the "father" of the
periodic table
12Dmitri Mendeleev
- In 1869 Mendeleev arranged elements by atomic
weights and properties. - Mendeleev's periodic table of 1869 contained 17
columns with two partial periods of seven
elements each (Li-F Na-Cl) followed by two
nearly complete periods (K-Br Rb-I). - In 1871 Mendeleev revised the 17-group table with
eight columns (the eighth group consisted of
transition elements). - This table exhibited similarities not only in
small units such as the triads, but showed
similarities in an entire network of vertical,
horizontal, and diagonal relationships. - The table contained gaps but Mendeleev predicted
the discovery of new elements. - In 1906, Mendeleev came within one vote of
receiving the Nobel Prize in chemistry.
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14Julius von Meyer
- Julius von Meyer also developed a periodic table
based on atomic masses, independently of
Mendeleev. - However, Meyer presented only 28 elements.
- Meyer had several inaccuracies and some elements
were not included. - Meyer was the first scientist to introduce the
concept of valence as a periodic property. - Also, Meyer never came to the idea of predicting
new elements and correcting atomic weights.
- Only a few months after Mendeleev published his
periodic table of all known elements (and
predicted several new elements to complete the
table, plus some corrected atomic weights), Meyer
published a virtually identical table.
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16Questions 4.2
- Complete questions 1-5 on P. 75 of Nelson VCE
Chemistry.
17Henry Moseley
- Moseley's research also showed that there were
gaps in his table at atomic numbers 43 and 61
which are now known to be radioactive and not
naturally occurring. - Following in the footsteps of Dmitri Mendeleyev,
Henry Moseley also predicted new elements.
- Using atomic number instead of atomic mass as the
organising principle was first proposed by the
British chemist Henry Moseley in 1913. - Before this discovery, atomic numbers were just
sequential numbers based on an element's atomic
weight. - Moseley's discovery showed that atomic numbers
had an experimentally measurable basis. - Atomic number solved anomalies like Iodine, that
has a higher atomic number than tellurium - so,
even though he didn't know why, Mendeleev was
right to place it after tellurium after all!
18Glenn Seaborg
- In the 1930s, the heaviest elements were being
put up in the body of the periodic table - Glenn Seaborg "plucked those out" while working
with Fermi in Chicago, naming them the Actinide
series. - This later permitted proper placement of
subsequently 'created' elements - the
Transactinides, changing the periodic table yet
again. - These elements were shown separate from the main
body of the table. - The concept demonstrated how the heavy elements
fit into the Periodic Table and thus demonstrated
their relationships to the other elements. - In addition to the discovery of transuranium
elements, Seaborg and his colleagues are
responsible for the identification of more than
100 isotopes of elements throughout the Periodic
Table.
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20The Periods of the Periodic Table
- The horizontal rows of the table are called
periods. - There are 7 periods.
- Elements in the same period have the same
outermost occupied shell. - Example Period 2 is filling the second shell.
21The Groups of the Periodic Table
- The vertical columns are called groups.
- Groups are numbered 1-18. This replaces the old
system of I-VIII. - Groups families have the same number of valence
electrons in their valence (outermost) shell.
22- The periodic table groups are as follows (in the
brackets are shown the old systems European and
American) - Group 1 (IA,IA) the alkali metals or hydrogen
family/lithium family - Group 2 (IIA,IIA) the alkaline earth metals or
helium family/beryllium family - Group 3 (IIIA,IIIB) the scandium family
- Group 4 (IVA,IVB) the titanium family
- Group 5 (VA,VB) the vanadium family
- Group 6 (VIA,VIB) the chromium family
- Group 7 (VIIA,VIIB) the manganese family
- Group 8 (VIII) the iron family
- Group 9 (VIII) the cobalt family
- Group 10 (VIII) the nickel family
- Group 11 (IB,IB) the coinage metals (not an
IUPAC-recommended name) or copper family - Group 12 (IIB,IIB) the zinc family
- Group 13 (IIIB,IIIA) the boron family
- Group 14 (IVB,IVA) the carbon family
- Group 15 (VB,VA) the pnictogens (not an
IUPAC-recommended name) or nitrogen family - Group 16 (VIB,VIA) the chalcogens or oxygen
family - Group 17 (VIIB,VIIA) the halogens or fluorine
family - Group 18 (Group 0) the noble gases or helium
family/neon family
23Questions 4.3
- Complete questions 1-5 on P. 80 of Nelson VCE
Chemistry.
24The Blocks of the Periodic Table (s-block)
- The s-block
- The s subshell of the valence shell is being
filled. - Since a s subshell holds 2 electrons, only 2
groups of elements (Groups 1 2) are in this
block - Facts
- In the outermost occupied shell there are 1 or 2
electrons in the s subshell but none in the p
subshell. - If the second outermost shell contains a d
subshell, it does not contain electrons.
25The Blocks of the Periodic Table (p-block)
- The p-block
- The p subshell of the outermost shell is being
filled. - A p subshell can hold only 6 electrons, hence
there are 6 groups in the p-block - Facts
- In the outermost occupied shell there are 2
electrons in the s subshell and 1 or more
electrons in the p subshell. - If the second outermost shell contains a d
subshell, it is full.
26The Blocks of the Periodic Table (d-block)
- The d subshell is being filled.
- Due to the order of of energies of the subshells,
this only occurs after the next shell has started
to fill. - A d subshell can hold 10 electrons, hence 10
groups are found in the d-block. - Metals in this block are collectively known as
the transition metals. - 3d subshell filling elements are called first
transition series. 4d are second etc. - Electron configuration
- In the outermost occupied shell the s subshell is
full but there are no electons in the p subshell. - The d subshell of the second outermost shell
contain 1 or more electrons
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28Questions 4.4
- Complete questions 1-5 on P. 83 of Nelson VCE
Chemistry.
29The Noble Gases
- The noble gases are found in group 18 of the
modern periodic table. They were not included in
the original periodic table. - Noble gases are found in minerals or in the
atmosphere in trace amounts. - Noble gases are un-reactive (inert) due to having
a full outer shell. - Henry Cavendish, in 1784, placed some air and
pure oxygen into a U-shaped tube that contained
mercury. - He then added some salts and a base to the
mercury. Cavendish used a electric discharge to
start the reaction. - These reactions removed the nitrogen and oxygen
from the air. - Surprisingly a bubble remained in the top of the
tube. - This unreactive bubble was called Cavendishs
bubble. - More than 100 years, this bubble was named Argon
meaning Greek for lazy one.
30Rayleigh and Ramsey
- In the late nineteenth century, Lord Rayleigh and
William Ramsay theorised that the nitrogen
extracted from air was associated with another
gas, argon. - With this discovery, they realized that a whole
class of gases was missing from the periodic
table. - Eventually all the known noble gases except for
helium were discovered in the air, with argon
being much more common than the others, and the
table was completed. - Helium was detected spectrographically in the Sun
in 1868. The isolation of helium on Earth had to
wait until 1895. - Radon was isolated and studied in 1910 after many
years of investigating by Ramsey. Radon is
radioactive.
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32Elements known before 1700
Elements known before 1700, plus those discovered
between 1700 and 1799
Elements known before 1800, plus those discovered
between 1800 and 1899
Elements known before 1900, plus those discovered
between 1900 and 2005
33The Missing Elements
- By 1925, 88 out of the 92 naturally occurring
elements had been identified. - Elements 43 (Technetium) ,61 (Promethium), 85
(Astatine) and 87 (Francium) were missing. - All are radioactive with very short half-lives.
- 61,85 and 87 have been identified in decaying
uranium. All are extremely rare. - 43 has only been produced synthetically.
- The periodic table is now complete!
34Alternative Tables The periodic spiral of
Professor Thoedor Benfey.
35Alternative Tables Albert Tarantolas orbital
periodic table.
36Alternative Tables Alexander Arrangement of the
Elements
37Stowes Arrangement
38Questions 4.5
- Complete questions 1-4 on P. 86 of Nelson VCE
Chemistry.
39Review Questions
- Complete questions 1-8 on P. 88-89 of Nelson VCE
Chemistry.