regions

141

Upload: palmer-mcfarland

Post on 30-Dec-2015

28 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Regions. Scientists. Families. Vocab. Trends. Grab Bag. Regions. Scientists. Families. Vocab. Trends. Grab Bag. $100. $100. $100. $100. $100. $100. $200. $200. $200. $200. $200. $200. $300. $300. $300. $300. $300. $300. $400. $400. $400. $400. $400. $400. $500. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Regions
Page 2: Regions

Regions

Page 3: Regions

Scientists

Page 4: Regions

Families

Page 5: Regions

Vocab

Page 6: Regions

Trends

Page 7: Regions

Grab Bag

Page 8: Regions

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

Page 9: Regions

Name 4 characteristics

of metals.

Page 10: Regions

Shiny, malleable, ductile, and conductive

Page 11: Regions

What region of theperiodic table do

metals react with inorder to become

stable?

Page 12: Regions

The nonmetals

Page 13: Regions

Walk up to the periodic table and point out ALL

the metals.

Page 14: Regions
Page 15: Regions

Potassium has properties most

similar to calcium, argon, or rubidium

Page 16: Regions

Rubidium because elements are most

similar to those in the same group.

Page 17: Regions

Write a noble gas configuration for a d-block element of

your choice

Page 18: Regions

Use a noble gas in brackets, then read the

next line on the periodic table until you get to the

element.

Page 19: Regions

Name the 3 scientistswho contributed to the periodic table, in order.

Page 20: Regions

Newlands, Mendeleev,and Moseley

Page 21: Regions

Who arranged the periodic table by atomic number?

Page 22: Regions

Henry Moseley

Page 23: Regions

Who was the firstscientist to arrange the

periodic table by properties and

the Law of Octaves?

Page 24: Regions

JohnNewlands

Page 25: Regions

Whose contribution was significant because he had better technology

available to him?

Page 26: Regions

Henry Moseley

Page 27: Regions

Who left gapsin the periodic

table and predicted properties of

elements?

Page 28: Regions

Dmitri Mendeleev

Page 29: Regions

Walk up & point to the families on the periodic

table in order from left to right & top

to bottom.

Page 30: Regions

alkali metals, alkali-earth,transitions, halogens,

noble gases, lanthanides, actinides

Page 31: Regions

Which family is slightly harder, denser and less

reactive than the alkali metals?

Page 32: Regions

Alkaline earth metals

Page 33: Regions

Which group has a small peak on an ionization energy graph due to a

half full orbital?

Page 34: Regions

Group 15

Page 35: Regions

Which 2 families are the most

reactive?

Page 36: Regions

Alkali metalsand halogens

Page 37: Regions

Which family has 7 valence electrons? Give

a noble gas configuration of any one of them to demonstrate.

Page 38: Regions

halogens

Page 39: Regions

DefineOctet Rule.

Page 40: Regions

The tendency of atoms to gain or lose electrons in order to become stable

(refers mainly to filling the

s and p orbitals.

Page 41: Regions

Defineionization energy.

Page 42: Regions

The energy requiredto remove an electron.

Page 43: Regions

Define electron affinity.

Page 44: Regions

The amount of energyreleased when an atom

gains an electron.

Page 45: Regions

Definenuclear charge.

Page 46: Regions

The charge/strength of the protons in

the nucleus.

Page 47: Regions

Shielding effect

Page 48: Regions

The reduction in attraction between the

valence e and the nucleus due to the

interference of the core e

Page 49: Regions

Where on theperiodic table is ionization energy

the greatest?

Page 50: Regions

Top right.

Page 51: Regions

Which trendincreases down a group but has no

change across a period?

Page 52: Regions

The shielding effect. (electron shielding)

Page 53: Regions

Explain why atomicradius decreasesacross a period.

Page 54: Regions

The nuclear chargeincreases, and electronsare added to the sameenergy level, so the attraction is greater.

Page 55: Regions

Why does electronshielding increase

down a group?

Page 56: Regions

Core electrons are addedand the valence

electrons are further from the nucleus.

Page 57: Regions
Page 58: Regions

Which atom has alower ionization energy:silver (Ag), arsenic (As),

or strontium (Sr)? Explain your answer.

Page 59: Regions

Strontium, b/c it has more e- shielding than arsenic, and agreater desire to lose an e-

than silver because it wants to acquire a noble gas config.

Page 60: Regions

Which family tendsto have a +2 charge?

Page 61: Regions

Alkaline-Earth Metals

Page 62: Regions

Why does group 16 have a -2 charge?

Page 63: Regions

Group 16 wants to gain 2 e- to fill it’s

octet.

Page 64: Regions

Draw arrows on the board to represent the increase in the trend of

atomic radii.

Page 65: Regions

Should look like 9:30 on a clock higher on the right and higher at the

bottom

Page 66: Regions

Which family has the most negative electron

affinity values?

Page 67: Regions

halogens

Page 68: Regions

Although Xenon is a noble gas, it has reacted with other nonmetals. He, Ne, and Ar have

not. How is this possible?

Page 69: Regions

Because it is so far down the group, electron

shielding has permitted highly electronegative atoms to take a valence

electron.

Page 70: Regions
Page 71: Regions
Page 72: Regions
Page 73: Regions
Page 74: Regions
Page 75: Regions
Page 76: Regions
Page 77: Regions
Page 78: Regions

$200

$400

$600

$800

$1000

$200

$400

$600

$800

$1000

$200

$400

$600

$800

$1000

$200

$400

$600

$800

$1000

$200

$400

$600

$800

$1000

$200

$400

$600

$800

$1000

Page 79: Regions
Page 80: Regions
Page 81: Regions
Page 82: Regions
Page 83: Regions
Page 84: Regions
Page 85: Regions
Page 86: Regions
Page 87: Regions
Page 88: Regions
Page 89: Regions
Page 90: Regions
Page 91: Regions
Page 92: Regions
Page 93: Regions
Page 94: Regions
Page 95: Regions
Page 96: Regions
Page 97: Regions
Page 98: Regions
Page 99: Regions
Page 100: Regions
Page 101: Regions
Page 102: Regions
Page 103: Regions
Page 104: Regions
Page 105: Regions
Page 106: Regions
Page 107: Regions
Page 108: Regions
Page 109: Regions
Page 110: Regions
Page 111: Regions
Page 112: Regions
Page 113: Regions
Page 114: Regions
Page 115: Regions
Page 116: Regions
Page 117: Regions
Page 118: Regions
Page 119: Regions
Page 120: Regions
Page 121: Regions
Page 122: Regions
Page 123: Regions
Page 124: Regions
Page 125: Regions
Page 126: Regions
Page 127: Regions
Page 128: Regions
Page 129: Regions
Page 130: Regions
Page 131: Regions
Page 132: Regions
Page 133: Regions
Page 134: Regions
Page 135: Regions
Page 136: Regions
Page 137: Regions
Page 138: Regions
Page 139: Regions
Page 140: Regions
Page 141: Regions