ch. 5 - periodic law Flashcards

1
Q

how did Mendeleev group the elements?

A

organized in order of increasing atomic mass

predicted existence and properties of three remaining elements

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2
Q

how did Moseley group the elements?

A

organized in order of atomic number

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3
Q

Periodic Law

A

the physical and chemical properties of the elements are periodic functions of their atomic numbers

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4
Q

modern periodic table

A

elements w/ similar properties fall in the same group

elements ordered by atomic number

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5
Q

how are elements arranged?

A

vertically in groups, sharing chemical properties

horizontally in periods

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6
Q

group 1

A

alkali metals – soft, reactive, silvery

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7
Q

group 2

A

alkaline-earth metals – less reactive than g1, but still too reactive to be found in pure form in nature

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8
Q

hydrogen

A

unique element; light, reactive, gas

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9
Q

helium

A

special chemical stability

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10
Q

group 17

A

halogens – most reactive nonmetals, react w/ most metals forming salt

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11
Q

group 18

A

noble gasses – stable, usually unreactive, colorless, covalent shells

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12
Q

transition elements

A

d block elements; metallic properties

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13
Q

main-group elements

A

p and s blocks; varying properties

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14
Q

p block elements

A

nonmetals on right
metalloids forming staircase in middle
metals on lower left side – harder and denser than g2 but softer and less dense than d block metals

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15
Q

metalloids

A
semiconductors 
p block (staircase) located between nonmetals and metals
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16
Q

f block

A

between g3 & g4 in 6th and 7th periods
uranium = last naturally occurring element
n-2
lanthanides (first row) = shiny metals similar in reactivity to g2
actinides (second row) = radioactive

17
Q

atomic radii

A

atomic radius = half the distance between the nuclei of identical atoms bonded together
decreases left to right – increasing positive charge of nucleus, attracting electrons towards it
decreases down to up – decreasing size of electron cloud as sublevels decrease

18
Q

ionization energy

A

ionization energy = energy required to remove one electron from a neutral atom of an element
ionization - formation of an ion
increases left to right – increasing nuclear charge
increases down to up – more easily removable electrons
loses electron and takes energy

19
Q

electron affinity

A

electron affinity = energy it takes for an atom to add an electron
increases left to right – increasing nuclear charge
increases down to up – large electron cloud = far electrons from nucleus
gains electron & gives off energy

20
Q

ionic radii

A

decrease from left to right – electron cloud shrinks

decrease from down to up

21
Q

cation

A

cation = positive ion

loss of electrons leading to decrease in atomic radius

22
Q

anion

A

negative ion

addition of electrons increases atomic radius

23
Q

valence electrons

A

electrons available to be lost, gained, or shared in order to form chemical compounds
often located in incompletely filled main-energy levels

24
Q

electronegativity

A

ability of an atom to attract electrons
increases from left to right
increases from down to up
higher up = more electromagnetic

25
Q

why is 2nd ionization energy higher than 1st, and so on?

A

2nd requires more energy to remove electrons

26
Q

define diff ionization energies

A
1st = remove one electron
2nd = remove two electrons
3rd = remove three electrons
27
Q

of metals and nonmetals, which forms positive ions and which forms negative ions?

A

metals tend to form positive ions

nonmetals tend to form negative ions

28
Q

is energy released or absorbed when electrons are added?

A

released

29
Q

is energy released or absorbed when electrons are removed?

A

absorbed

30
Q

groups vs periods

A
groups = vertical columns of elements sharing similar properties
periods = horizontal rows of elements (indicating energy sublevels)