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Classification of Elements
The Periodic Table
One of the greatest songs!
• http://www.privatehand.com/flash/elements.html
The Wonders of the Periodic Table
Just in case you are ever on Jeopardy….
• The first recorded scientific discovery of an element was in 1649 when Hennig Brand (German) discovered Phosphorous (atomic number 15).
• As the number of known elements grew, scientists began to recognize
patterns in properties and began to develop classification schemes.
Arranging the Elements• Dmitri Mendeleev (1887), a Russian scientist,
looked at the chemical and physical properties of elements and organized them on the basis of their similarities
• By arranging the 63 known elements, he found that by placing them by increasing atomic weight he could put them into 7 groups, or columns.
• He found the pattern, all the elements in a column have the same valences, the number of electrons in the outer shell
The Modern Periodic Table• British scientist, Henry
Mosley, arranged the elements according to their atomic number
• The Periodic Law states that the physical and chemical properties of the elements are periodic functions of their atomic number
Design of the Periodic Table• Classification system
used to organize all the elements
• Information can be obtained about each element just by where it is placed in the periodic table!
Columns• Called groups or
families• Have similar, but not
identical properties
Rows• Also called periods• Elements are not alike in the rows• First element in a row is an extremely
active solid, where as the last is always an inactive gas
• There are 7 periods, with period 6 separated out to make the periodic table shorter
• Each of the rows fills the same electron orbits
Columns and Rows
Element Key, each element has their own…….
It is just the beginning!!!!
Let’s look at what we have…
Most of the 109 elements are classified as metals
Physical properties:
• Luster or shininess• Ductile means made into thin wires• Malleable means hammered into thin sheets• Allows heat and electricity to pass through• Have a high density
Chemical Properties of Metals• Depends on the number of electrons in the
outer shell of the atom• These outer shell electrons are weakly held
and tend to be lost when they chemically combined
• Easily react with water and gases in the atmosphere
• Metals are corrosive, they wear away ex. rust and tarnish
Position of Elements
Nonmetals• Physical properties are opposite of
metals, they are dull, brittle, and break easily, they are not ductile or malleable, and they can be a solid, liquid, or a gas
• Chemical properties are determined by the number of electrons in their outer shell
• Last row has 8 electrons in their outer shell, so they are non reactive
Metalloids• They have properties of both metals and
nonmetals• Metal-like• They conduct heat and electricity, but
not as well as metals• Can be shiny or dull• Are ductile and malleable• Include; boron, silicon, germanium,
arsenic, antimony, tellurium, polonium, and astatine
And to think: this is only the beginning………..