5.3 the periodic table (pages 194- 206) homework: page 206 # 3, 4, 5 case study page 202 #1-3 key...

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• The modern periodic table is organized according to the atomic numbers of the elements.

• When the elements are arranged in order of increasing atomic number, there is a regular pattern in the properties of elements.

• The three main classes of elements are metals, non-metals, and metalloids.

• Metals are usually solids at room temperature, shiny, good conductors, malleable and ductile.

• Nonmetals are usually gases or solids at room temperature, not shiny, poor conductors, brittle, and not ductile. Metalloids share properties of both metals and non-metals.

• Poisoning by metals in the environment is a serious problem. Mercury contamination of fish has severely affected the health and traditional practices of aboriginal peoples.

• In the periodic table, a period is a horizontal row of elements. A group, or family, is a vertical column of elements.

2. Why did Mendeleev not consider the number of subatomic particles as a

way to organize the elements?

• Mendeleev did not organize the elements according to subatomic particles since he did not know about them as they were discovered much later.

4. What are synthetic elements? Where do you find the synthetic elements in the periodic table?

• Synthetic elements are those elements that have been made by scientists.

• The synthetic elements in the periodic table are found amongst the elements that have atomic numbers more than 93.

5. Copy down Table 5.2MATERIAL STATE AT ROOM

TEMPERATUREAPPEARANCE CONDUCTIVITY MALLEABILITY

AND DUCTILITY

Metals Solid (except for mercury, which is a liquid)

Shiny Good conductors of heat and electricity

Malleable and ductile

Non-metals Some gases and some solids (except bromine, which is a liquid)

Not very shiny Poor conductors of heat and electricity

Brittle and not ductile

Periods and Groups in the Periodic Table:

• The elements are arranged in horizontal rows and vertical columns.

• The correct name for each vertical column is a group.

• Elements in the same chemical family are located in the same group.

• The horizontal rows are called periods.• There are 18 groups and 7 periods in the periodic

table.

Chemical Family Elements and Symbols

Alkali Metals Hydrogen (H), Sodium (Na), Lithium (Li), Potassium (K)

Alkaline Earth MetalsBeryllium (Be), Calcium (Ca), Magnesium (Mg), Strontium (Sr)

Halogens Fluorine (F), Bromine (Br), Astatine (At), Chlorine (Cl), Iodine (I)

Noble Gases Helium (He), Krypton (Kr), Radon (Rn), Neon (Ne), Xenon

(Xe)

The Invention of Chemical Symbols:• The system of chemical symbols that we use

today was first proposed by the Swedish chemist Jons Jacob Berzelius.

• This system was accepted all around the world. It was accepted not only because it provided symbols for all the known elements, but also because it showed how to create symbols for any new element that might be discovered later.

Rule 4: Later elements- named after countries, continents, scientists, place of discovery, or planets

Countries and Continents:

Americanium Am Europium Eu Germanium Ge

Polonium Po Francium Fr Indium In

Place of discovery:

Californium Cf Berkelium Bk

Name of scientists:

Einsteinium Es Fermium Ruthorfordium Mendelevium

Name of a Planet:

Plutonium Uranium Mercury Neptunium_____________________________________

Rule 5 The seven metals known to the ancients were called by their Latin names.

Examples:Natrium (Na) SodiumKalium (K) PotassiumHydragyrum (Hg) MercuryAurum (Au) GoldArgentum (Ag) SilverFerrum (Fe) IronPlumbum (Pb) Lead

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