topic 3 - atomic radius and electronegativity Flashcards

1
Q

Atomic Radius

A

The radius of an atom can change according to what is around it​

The electrons are in constant motion so the overall shape and size of the atom can change​

The only way to measure atomic radius is to measure the distance between two nuclei and divide by two

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2
Q

Trends across a period

A

As you go across a period, another proton is added each time​

The additional electrons are being added to the same shell so doesn’t increase the radius​
The extra proton in the nucleus causes an increase in the nuclear charge​

This creates a stronger attraction to the surrounding electrons so pulls them closer​
Therefore, atomic radius decreases across a period​

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3
Q

Trends down a group​

A

As you go down a group, atomic number is increasing​

The extra electrons are being added to new shells

This means that as you go down a group, the atomic radius increases

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4
Q

Transition metals​

A

the radii across the d-block are very similar as the increased nuclear charge is balanced by the extra shielding of the d-block electrons​

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5
Q

Ionic Radius – trends down groups​

A

Ionic radius increases as you go down a group as more shells are being added for each period​

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6
Q

Ionic Radius – trends across periods​

A

Cations (positive ions) are smaller than the corresponding atoms​

They have lost the outer shell electrons so are smaller than the atom​

They are isoelectronic – they all have the same electronic structure, i.e. Na+, Mg2+, Al3+​

They have different numbers of protons though!​

This means the pull from the nuclear charge is stronger across the period so the ionic radius decreases

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7
Q

Ionic Radius – trends across periods​

A

Anions (negative ions) are larger than the corresponding atom​

This is because the extra electrons push each other away (same charges repel)​

Anions are also isoelectronic but there is still an increase in nuclear charge across the period​

This means there is a stronger pull between the nucleus and outer electrons so the ionic radius decreases across the period​

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8
Q

Electronegativity

A

This measures the tendency of an atom to attract a bonding pair of electrons​

It increases as you go across a period​

It decreases as you go down a group​

Fluorine is the most electronegative element​

Group 0 gases do not have electronegativity that can be reliably measured because they don’t make bonds

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9
Q

What causes electronegativity?​

A

Electronegativity depends on:​

Number of protons in the nucleus​

Distance from nucleus to bonding electrons​

Amount of shielding from inner electrons​

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10
Q

what is shielding?​

A

The shielding effect is a reduction in the attractive force between an electron and the nucleus of the atom caused by the inner shell electrons​

The outer electrons are attracted by the nucleus, but also repelled by the electrons in the inner shells, making the overall attraction less​

The more inner electron shells there are, the more the shielding effect so the less attraction there is between the outer electrons and the nucleus​

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11
Q

Electronegativity – across the period​

A

The bonding electrons are shielded by the same number of inner electrons​

BUT proton number is increasing​

This means electronegativity increases across the period​

The Group 7 element will be more electronegative than the group 1 element​

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12
Q

Electronegativity – down the group

A

As you go down a group, the atoms have more electron shells​

This means there is more shielding and a greater distance between the nucleus and the bonding electrons​

There is less pull between the nucleus and the bonding electrons​

This means that electronegativity will decrease down the group

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13
Q

Electronegativity – other trends​

A

There are some diagonal pairs of elements which have identical electronegativity​

E.g. Beryllium and Aluminium​

There is an increase in electronegativity from group 2 to group 3, but a decrease down the groups​

The differences in electronegativity balance out so the two elements have the same electronegativity​

This means they can react in a similar way and form similar bonds​

Other pairs can do the same e.g. Lithium and magnesium​

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