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Ch 6 review. Who was responsible for creating the first organization of the periodic table. Moseley Dalton Mendeleev Rutherford. How was the first periodic table organized. By increasing atomic number By increasing number of electrons By increasing mass number By increasing atomic mass.
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Who was responsible for creating the first organization of the periodic table • Moseley • Dalton • Mendeleev • Rutherford
How was the first periodic table organized • By increasing atomic number • By increasing number of electrons • By increasing mass number • By increasing atomic mass
The number of valance electrons • Is the same as the protons • Is the electrons in the outer energy level • Is the electrons in the inner energy level • Does not change in a period
Vertical columns on the periodic table are called • Groups • Periods • Rows • halogens
As you go across a period • Valance electrons increase • Valance electrons stay the same • Metallic properties increase • Atomic size increases
This person organized the periodic table we currently use • Moseley • Dalton • Mendeleev • Rutherford
When a metal and a nonmetal bond • The metal takes e- from the NM • The NM takes e- from the metal • The e- are shared • e- are not transferred
What group is entirely radioactive • Halogens • Lanthanides • Alkalis • Actinides
Metals can be found on • The left of the table • The right of the table • The stair-step line • All elements that are solids
This word means to be hammered into thin sheets • Ductile • Malleable • Luster • inert
How many valance electrons do alkaline earth metals have • 1 • 2 • 5 • 7
This word means will not react • Malleable • Luster • Inert • radioactive
A salt is formed between • An alkali metal and a halogen • An alkaline earth metal and a Nobel gas • Rare earth elements • Transition metals
This element is in group 6 period 4 • Cr • Hf • Sg • Uun
This element is a semiconductor that has more protons than titanium but less valance electrons than oxygen • Antimony • Boron • Polonium • silicon
Elements in this group react violently with water to lose one electron • Nobel gasses • Halogens • Alkali metals • Transition elements
This group of elements have luster, and conduct electricity • Metals • Metalloids • Nonmetals • halogens
This group of elements typically will share electrons • Group 1 • Group 2 • Group 16 • Groups 18
This element is a transition metal • Tungsten • Lithium • Boron • Xenon
These elements might be shiny or dull, and are not great at conducting heat • Metals • Nonmetals • Metalloids • Rare earth metals
This element has more valance electrons than oxygen, less protons than krypton and is in period 3 • Fluorine • Chlorine • Lithium • sodium
This semiconductor is in period 7 • Lead • Bismuth • Polonium • Astitine
To be stretched into thin wires is • Malleable • Ductile • Luster • inert
The periodic table we currently used is organized by a main property, and a secondary which are • Atomic size and atomic number • Atomic number and atomic mass • Atomic mass and number of electrons • Atomic number and mass number
This group is unlikely to react with any other elements • Nobel gasses • Halogens • Alkali metals • Transition metals
An element with 7 valance electron most likely belongs to group • 18 • 17 • 7 • 1
This group needs to loose 2 valance electrons to have a full outer shell • Group 1 • Group 2 • Group 16 • Group 17
This element is a rare earth metal • Neodymium • Barium • Potassium • Nickel