Periodic table Flashcards

1
Q

What is a group in the periodic table?

A

A column of elements with similar properties and the same number of outer shell electrons

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2
Q

What is a period in the periodic table?

A

A horizontal row. Elements show trends in properties across a period.

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3
Q

What is periodicity?

A

The regular repeating pattern in properties of the elements across different periods

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4
Q

How is a subshell different from an orbital?

A

A subshell is a group of the same type of orbitals.

Orbitals are regions of an atom containing up to 2 electrons with opposite spins. (s orbitals are spherical in shape, p orbitals are dumbbell shaped.)

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5
Q

How many electrons can an orbital hold?

A

2

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6
Q

Which has a higher energy level, an N d orbital or an N+1 s orbital

A

The d orbital

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7
Q

How are noble gas electron configurations shown

A

[Noble Gas} Then electron config from that level

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8
Q

What is first ionisation energy?

A

The energy required to remove one electron from each atom in one mole of gaseous atoms (to form 1 mole of gaseous 1+ ions)

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9
Q

What is the first i.e. equation of any element, X?

A

X(g) —> X+(g) + e-

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10
Q

What is the general trend in first i.e. across a period?

A

Increases

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11
Q

How does first ionisation energy change down a group?

A

Decreases

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12
Q

Why do the first ionisation energies drop sharply between the Group 0 element of one period to the Group 1 element of the next period?

A

The electrons are being removed from a new outer shell.

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13
Q

What are the four factors effecting first i.e. ?

A

i. Nuclear charge (number of protons)
ii. Shielding (number of shells)
iii. Atomic radius
iv. Nuclear attraction

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14
Q

What points on a first i.e. graph do not obey the general trend and why?

A

2 –> 3 - The fall between groups 2 and 3 marks the start of filling the p subshell. In Be, the outer electron is in a 2s orbital, in B the outer electron is in a 2p orbital.

The 2p orbital in B is of higher energy and experiences more shielding from inner electrons, as it is also shielded by the electrons in the 2s subshell.

Despite the fact that the nuclear charge increases by +1 from Be to B, the difference in shielding and energy means the nuclear attraction is weaker in B, so less energy is required to remove it’s outer electron.

5 –> 6 - The fall between groups 5 and 6 marks the start of electron paring in the p-orbitals in the p-subshell. In N, the outer electron is unpaired in a 2p orbital, in O the outer electron is paired in a 2p orbital.

The paired electrons in oxygen repel slightly, making it easier to remove an electron than in nitrogen.

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15
Q

How do group 2 metals react with oxygen? Let M be the metal

A

2M (s) + O2 (g) –> 2MO (s)

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16
Q

How do group 2 metals react with water? Let M be the metal

A

M(s) + 2H2O (L) —> M(OH)2 + H2

Metal + Water —> Metal hydroxide + H2

17
Q

How do group 2 metals react with acid? Let M be the metal

A

M(s) + HCl2 (aq) —> MCl2 (aq) + H2O

Metal + Acid —> Salt + Water

18
Q

What does a reaction need to be balanced?

A

Same number of atoms on both sides
Same charge on both sides
Same oxidation number total on both sides

19
Q

What does phenolphthalein indicator do?

A

Turns pink in alkaline solutions

20
Q

How does the sum of the first and second IEs tell you about how reactive the metal is with water?

A

The higher the sum of the first and second I.E, the higher the temperature of the water has to be before reacting

21
Q

How do group 2 metal oxides react with water? Let M be the metal. What would be seen when this reaction occurs?

A

MO + H2O —> M(OH)2

Metal oxide dissolves —> White solid forms

22
Q

What is solubility?

A

A measure of the ability of a solute to dissolve in a solvent.

23
Q

What is alkalinity?

A

A measure of the concentration of hydroxide ions, OH-(aq) present in an alkaline solution.

24
Q

How do the solubility, alkalinity and pH of the group 2 hydroxides change down the group?

A

They increase

25
Q

How is the solubility of the metal hydroxides related to their alkalinity?

A

The more soluble the hydroxide the more OH- ions are present in the solution, so the more alkaline the solution is.

26
Q
What colours are:
Chlorine 
Bromine
Iodine
At room temperature?
A
Chlorine = Green
Bromine = Brown (with orange vapour)
Iodine = Grey
27
Q

What is the trend in boiling point as you go down group 7?

A

Increases

28
Q

Of Cl, Br and I which has the strongest covalent bond and why?

A

Chlorine because in each halogen, the covalent bond is formed by a pair of electrons between the atoms attracting the nuclei of these atoms. The closer the electrons are to the nucleus, the stronger the attraction.

In addition, the smaller atoms have more condensed electron cloud with a higher charge density. This also leads to stronger bonding.

29
Q

Why are negative ions larger than the corresponding atoms?

A

Because accepting an electron increases the repulsion, pushing the e- slightly further out

30
Q
What colours are:
Chlorine 
Bromine
Iodine
In water?
A
Chlorine = Very pale green 
Bromine = Orange
Iodine = Orange
31
Q
What colours are:
Chlorine 
Bromine
Iodine
In hexane?
A
Chlorine = Pale green
Bromine = Orange
Iodine = Purple
32
Q

What is a disproportionation reaction?

A

A reaction where the same element is both oxidised and reduced.