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19 October 2009. Chapter 5-7 Notes. Mr. Herbst Room 2705. Important terminology/concepts:. Orbital – three dimensional region around the nucleus that indicated the probable location of an atom Pauli exclusion principle – no two electrons can be in the same place at the same time
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19 October 2009 Chapter 5-7 Notes Mr. Herbst Room 2705
Important terminology/concepts: • Orbital – three dimensional region around the nucleus that indicated the probable location of an atom • Pauli exclusion principle – no two electrons can be in the same place at the same time • Hund’s rule – electrons prefer to be unpaired and unpaired electrons in the same orbital spin in the opposite direction • Electron configuration – the arrangement of electrons in an atom
Predicting Electron Location • Necessary b/c chemical properties are determined by electrons (though we can only predict probable location; they are always moving • Ground State - the lowest allowable energy state of an atom (not an excited state)
Sublevels and Orbitals • In each level of electrons, there are 4 sublevels • ‘s’; 1 orbital; 2 electrons • ‘p’; 3 orbitals; 6 electrons • ‘d’; 5 orbitals; 10 electrons • ‘f’; 7 orbitals; 14 electrons
Orbital Notation • One way to show electron ‘position’ • draw boxes for the sublevels; write one arrow for each electron • arrows in the same box need to be opposite • arrows need to be unpaired when possible
LEAVE SPACE HERE!!!! • About 1 page
1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 3d 4s 4p 4d 4f 5s 5p 5d 5f 6s 6p 6d 7s 7p
Electron configuration NOTATION • electron configuration notation for nitrogen: 1s22s22p3 • electron configuration notation for oxygen: 1s22s22p4
Chapter 6 Notes • The Periodic TableTrends, Properties of the elements
Periodic Law - The properties of the elements repeat periodically when the elements are arranged by atomic number - Dmitri Mendeleev - father of the modern periodic table • Series - Horizontal row on the periodic table (also called row or level) • Family - Vertical column on the periodic table (also called group or column)
Families of the periodic table • Alkali Metals = Group IA- so called because they form alkali (basic)solutions with water (does not include Hydrogen) • Alkaline Earth Metals = Group IIA- also form basic solutions • Halogen family = Group VIIA “Salt formers”
Noble Gases = Group VIIIA also called INERT GASES • - all have full s and p orbitals (called a stable octet) • - are unreactive- all other elements want this same orbital configuration
ALL OTHER FAMILIES ARE NAMED FOR THE FIRST ELEMENT IN THE COLUMN • Representative elements = Groups IA - VIIA • Transition Metals = Group B - located in the center of the table (may form one or more ion) • Inner Transition Metals = removed from the table (Actinides & Lanthanides)
Metals - on the left side of the table 1. Want to lose electrons- form _____ ions 2. Are malleable and ductile 3. Conduct heat and electricity 4. From strong ionic compounds with non-metals 5. Low electronegativity and ionization energy • Metallic character increases to the left and down on the table
Non-Metals - On right side of the table 1. Want to gain electrons- form ______ ions 2. Form strong ionic compounds with metals (not noble gases) 3. High electronegativity and ionization energy • Non-Metallic character increases to the right and up on the table
Metalloids - exhibit properties of both metals and non-metals • Lie along the stairstep line on the periodic table • Electronegativity- measure of attraction an atom has for electrons • Ionization energy- amount of energy needed to remove an electron from an atom
Electron Dot Structures • Valence electrons are the furthest away from the nucleus and are involved in chemical reactions • Valence number can be predicted from the periodic table (Same as Column #) • Electron dot structures are a simple way to show the number of valence electrons