Download - Adopt-A-Family: Carbon Family
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Julianne Noveras
Adopt-A-Family:Carbon Family
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• They all have 4 valence electrons.• Can form up to 4 bonds. (More than all the
other families.)• React in similar ways with oxygen and other
elements.
What do they have in Common?
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They all have 4 valence electrons. They can form up to 4 bonds.
More than all the other families in the periodic table.
What make this family different?
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• Symbol: C• Atomic number: 6• Atomic weight: 12.0107• Personality: Shape Shifter• Classification: Non-metal
Carbon
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• Symbol: Si• Atomic number: 14• Atomic weight: 28.0855 • Personality: Technician• Classification: Metalloid
Silicon
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• Symbol: Ge• Atomic number: 32• Atomic weight: 72.64• Personality: Energy Booster• Classification: Metalloid
Germanium
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• Symbol: Sn• Atomic number: 50• Atomic weight: 118.710 • Personality: The elderly one• Classification: Metal
Tin
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• Symbol: Pb• Atomic number: 82• Atomic weight: 207.2 • Personality: Brave and Strong• Classification: Metal
Lead
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Carbon: Used in steel and filters.
Silicon: Used for semiconductors and it is the main ingredient for glass.
Germanium: Used as a material in semiconductors.
Tin: Used in the coating for steel cans.
Lead: Used for batteries, solder, shielding against radiation, and pluming.
Jobs
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The carbon family is reactive. Reactivity increases with the atomic number. The carbon
family also forms covalent bonds. This means the element combine with other elements by sharing 1 or more electron,
especially in pairs between 2 atoms. The element Tin and Lead can also form Ionic bonds too.
Reactivity & Bonds
-Carbon reacts with Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus, and Sulfur.
-Silicon reacts with Nitrogen, Oxygen, Potassium, and Magnesium.
-Lead reacts with Oxygen, Tin, Fluorine, Bromine, Iodine, Nitrogen, Sulfur, and Phosphorus.
-Tin reacts with Copper, Iron, and Lead.
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Carbon is the famous member of this family because carbon atoms are found in ALL living things. Every living thing is
made up of carbon. It is in our atmosphere, the earth's crust, and in
the bodies of plants and animals. Without carbon, life would not be
possible.
Claim to Fame:Carbon
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Range of Sizes
Lightest
Heaviest
Weight/Mass Order
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• Bentor, Yinon. Chemical Element.com. N.p., 1996-2010 . Web. 8 Dec. 2011. <http://www.chemicalelements.com/ index.html>.
• Dingle, Adrian. “The Carbon Family.” The Periodic Table. New York, New York: Kingsfisher Publications Plc, 2007. 70-79. Print.
• Padilla, Michael J, Ph.D., Loannis Miaoulis, Ph.D., and Martha Cyr, Ph.D. Prentice Hall Science Explorer Chemical Building Blocks. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005. 100. Print.
• Thomas, Jen. The Elements: Silicon. Tarrytown, New York: Marshall Cavendish Corporation, 2002. N. pag. Print.
Bibliography