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Alkali and Alkali Earth Metals. Group 3 1/14/10. Outline. In this PowerPoint we will go over: Alkali Metals Alkali Earth Metals How Alkali Metals and Alkali Earth Metals compare and contrast. Alkali Metals. Alkali Metals have closer characteristics than any other group
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Alkali and Alkali Earth Metals Group 3 1/14/10
Outline • In this PowerPoint we will go over: • Alkali Metals • Alkali Earth Metals • How Alkali Metals and Alkali Earth Metals compare and contrast
Alkali Metals • Alkali Metals have closer characteristics than any other group • Alkali Metals are soft and are silvery in color • Alkali Metals are reactive • No Alkali Metals are found in nature • All Alkali Metals have one electron in their outer shell
Lithium • Discovered in 1817 by Arfvedson • Not found in nature • Reacts violently with water • Lithium is corrosive and requires special handling • Used in special glasses and ceramics
Sodium • First isolated in 1807 by Davy • There is a lot of sodium in the Sun and stars • Sodium is the fourth most abundant element in nature and the most abundant Alkali Metal on Earth • Reactive with water
Potassium • Discovered in 1807 by Davy • Insoluble • Used in fertilizers • One of the most reactive metals • Soft and easy to cut
Rubidium • Discovered in 1861 by Bunsen and Kirchoff • Can be liquid at room temperature • Ignites spontaneously in air • Reacts violently in water
Cesium • Discovered in 1860 by Bunsen and Kirchoff • Silvery-white color • Soft • Ductile • Reacts explosively with cold water • Melts at room temperature
Francium • Discovered in 1939 by Mlle • Heaviest Alkali Metal • Most unstable of the first 101 elements • No weighable quantity of the element has been prepared or isolated
Alkali Earth Metals • All Alkali Earth Metals have two electrons in the outer shell • All Alkali Earth Metals are not found in nature • All are silvery in color • All are softer than other metals but are not as soft as Alkali Metals
Beryllium • Discovered in 1798 by Vauquelin • First isolated in 1828 by Wohler and Bussy • Steel gray color • Lightest of all metals • Used in high-speed aircraft, missiles, spacecraft, and communication satellites
Magnesium • Eighth most abundant element • Silvery-white in color • Flammable • One-third lighter than aluminum • Used in flash photography and flares
Calcium • Discovered in 1808 • Fifth most abundant element on Earth • Found in leaves, bones, teeth, and shells • Silvery color • Harder than the other Alkali Earth Metals • Reacts with water
Strontium • First isolated in 1808 by Davy • Silvery color • Soft • Used in refining zinc • Used to make fireworks red
Barium • Discovered in 1808 by Davy • Silvery-white color • Decomposes in water or alcohol • Used in making rubber • Used in peroxide, chloride, sulfate, carbonate, nitrate and chlorate
Radium • Discovered in 1898 by Marie Curie • Present in all uranium minerals • White color • In its pure form, it blackens on exposure to air • Glows in the dark • Used in glow-in-the-dark paints
Compare • Both Alkali and Alkali Metals are reactive, are silvery in color, are soft, and are not found in nature.
Contrast • Alkali Metals have one electron in their outer shells while Alkali Earth Metals have two. • Alkali Metals have low melting points in comparison to Alkali Earth Metals which have high melting points.
Summary • In conclusion, Alkali and Alkali Earth Metals are very similar. Their difference with each other are minute but their differences with the other elements are great.