the halogens

12
Property Fluorine Chlorine Bromine Iodine State at room temp Gas Formula of molecule Boiling point -188 °C –34 °C 59°C 184°C Colour of vapour Pale yellow Electronic configurat ion [He] [Ne] [Ar] [Kr] The Halogens Complete this table. Can you explain the trend in boiling point?

Upload: nalani

Post on 05-Jan-2016

22 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

The Halogens. C omplete this table. Can you explain the trend in boiling point?. The Halogens. C omplete this table. Can you explain the trend in boiling point?. Temporary dipole occurs in one molecule owing to an unequal distribution of the electron cloud around it. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Halogens

Property Fluorine Chlorine Bromine Iodine

State at room temp Gas

Formula of molecule

Boiling point -188 °C –34 °C 59°C 184°C

Colour of vapour Pale yellow

Electronic configuration [He] [Ne] [Ar] [Kr]

The Halogens

Complete this table. Can you explain the trend in boiling point?

Page 2: The Halogens

Property Fluorine Chlorine Bromine Iodine

State at room temp Gas Gas Liquid Solid

Formula of molecule

F2 Cl2 Br2 I2

Boiling point -188 °C –34 °C 59°C 184°C

Colour of vapour Pale yellow Yellow/green Brown Black

Electronic configuration [He]2s2 2p5 [Ne] 3s2 3p5 [Ar] 4s2 3d104p5 [Kr] 5s2 4d105p5

The Halogens

Complete this table. Can you explain the trend in boiling point?

Page 3: The Halogens

Explaining the trend in boiling point

Temporary dipole occurs in one molecule owing to an unequal distribution of the electron cloud around it.

This temporary dipole induces a dipole in another molecule and the two attract each other.

Known as induced dipole-dipole forces or Van der Waals forces.

Page 4: The Halogens

The strength of van der waals forces increase:

The larger the molecule (due to a larger electron cloud)

Page 5: The Halogens

DISPLACEMENT REACTIONS

2KCl + I2

2KBr + I2

halogen

chlorine

bromine

iodine

salt (aq)potassium

chloridepotassium

iodidepotassiumbromide

2KCl + Br2

no reactionno reaction

no reaction

Page 6: The Halogens

The Halogens: Recognising them

• The halogens form solutions with different colours. A colour change will show if a reaction has taken place.

Halogen Water Cyclohexane

Cl2 Pale-green Pale-green

Br2 Orange Orange

I2 Brown violet

If you shake the reaction mixture with an organic solvent it can help distinguish between them

Page 7: The Halogens

What is the trend in reactivity of the halogens?

How can we explain this trend?

Page 8: The Halogens

The halogens get less reactive as we descend the group.

This is because…

- atomic size- shielding- nuclear attraction

How does this link to redox?

Page 9: The Halogens

Displacement: a redox reaction

Write an equation for the reaction between chlorine and bromide ions,

showing the changes in oxidation numbers.

Which species is the oxidising agent?

Page 10: The Halogens

Cl2 (aq) + 2Br- (aq) 2Cl- (aq) + Br2 (aq)0 -1 -1 0

Chlorine is reducedBromine is oxidised

Chlorine acts as an oxidising agent

Page 11: The Halogens

TRENDS IN OXIDISING ABILITY

Halogens react by gaining electrons

This means they are oxidising agents

They themselves are reduced

O xidationI sL osingR eductionI sG aining

Cl2 + 2e- 2Cl-

Gain of electrons

Oxidising ability of halogens decreases down the group

Because atoms become larger (and less electronegative)

Page 12: The Halogens

Oxidising power trend: Cl2 > Br2 > I2

When a halogen acts as an oxidising agent, it gains electrons (taken from the oxidised species).

X2 + 2 e- → 2 X-

Going down the group it becomes harder to gain an electron because:Atoms are larger & there is more shielding (due to extra electron shell)

Cl

Br

I