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Periodic Table & Periodicity. Ms Piela Durfee High. Periodic Trends/ Periodicity. A periodic trend is a pattern observed on the periodic table for an atomic property Each of the four trends have explanations for their group trend and their period trend. The 4 Main Periodic Trends are:.
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Periodic Table & Periodicity Ms Piela Durfee High
Periodic Trends/ Periodicity • A periodic trend is a pattern observed on the periodic table for an atomic property • Each of the four trends have explanations for their group trend and their period trend
The Period Trend Explanation • When comparing elements in the same period, compare the effective nuclear charges (Zeff) • Effective nuclear charge is the net positive charge experienced by electrons in an atom
The Period Trend Explanation • The atoms on the right of the periodic table have higher effective nuclear charges (Zeff) when compared to elements on the left • This is due to electrons being added to the sameenergy level. They are approximately the same distance away from the nucleus • In general, the further atoms are away from the nucleus, the less attracted they become
The Group Trend Explanation • When comparing atoms in the same group, compare the amount of electron shielding occuring • Electron shielding is where core electrons shield outer electrons from the charge of the nucleus • Thus, outer electrons are held less tightly because of electron/electron repulsion
The Group Trend Explanation • Atoms on the top of the periodic table have less electron shielding than atoms at the bottom • As you increase in the number of energy levels, more electron shielding occurs • This does NOT occur across a period as energy levels will not change
Atomic Radius • Atomic Radius is a measure of the size of the atom • Measured by the distance from the nucleus to the outermost electrons
Atomic Radius • Atomic Radii decreases moving across a period, and increases going down a group • For the period trend: with effective nuclear charge, the increased positive charge pulls electrons closer, causing the size to decrease • With the group trend, the increasing energy levels provide more electrons, which increase the size of the atom (electron shielding doesn’t really work)
Ionization Energy • Ionization energy is the energy required to remove an electron from an atom • Amount of energy increases as the number of ionizations occur (i.e. first ionization takes less energy than the second, and so on)
Ionization Energy • Ionization energy increases going across a period and decrease going down a group • With increasing effective nuclear charge, electrons are held more tightly, thus atoms on the right require more energy to remove an electron • With increasing electron shielding, electrons are held less tightly and thus decrease in IE
Electronegativity • Electronegativity is the ability of an atom in a molecule to attract shared electrons to itself • Think of electronegativity as a “tug of war”
Electronegativity • Electronegativity increases going across a period, and decreases going down a group • Due to increasing effective nuclear charge, atoms on the right hold electrons more tightly, causing them to have high EN • Due to electron shielding, atoms on thebottom tend to hold electrons more loosely, making them have low EN
Electronegativity • The noble gases are excluded from this trend as they tend not to bond with other atoms • This makes fluorine the most electronegative atom
Electron Affinity • Electron Affinity is the energy associated with the addition of an electron to an atom • The more negative the quantity, the more energy is released upon the addition of an electron
Electron Affinity • Electron affinity increases across a period and decreases going down a group • Due to increasing effective nuclear charge, atoms on the right tend to want to attract negative electrons more • Due to electron shielding, atoms on the bottom tend to hold electrons more loosely, making them have low EA