bell ringer # 1 1. which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern...

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Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms C. Number of protons D. Date of discovery 2. How many elements are listed in the modern periodic table? A. 28 B. 60 C. 72 D. More than 100

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Page 1: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Bell Ringer # 1

1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table?

A. Alphabetical orderB. Masses of atomsC. Number of

protonsD. Date of discovery

2. How many elements are listed in the modern periodic table?

A. 28B. 60C. 72D. More than 100

Page 2: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Bell Ringer continued

3. What do elements in the same column have in common?

A. Similar chemical properties

B. Number of protonsC. Masses f their atomsD. Size of their atoms

Page 3: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Quiz #1 - Video

1. There are 5 times as many metals on the periodic table as nonmetals.

2. Bromine is a brown liquid at room temperature.

3. Chlorine gas was used as a weapon during WW II.

4. The electrons form rings around the nucleus called shells.

5. Lithium is a hard gray metal.

Page 4: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Quiz #1 – Video - Answers

6. Some Group 1 metals mix with water to cause an explosion.

7.Once the outer shell reaches 8 electrons, itis stable.

8.The noble gases are highly attracted to the alkali metals.

9. Mercury was once used for filling cavities. 10. Many of the metals are dull with no shine. 11. Most of the metals have varying numbers of

valence electrons from 4-7.

Page 5: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Bell Ringer #11. What are valence electrons?2. Summarize how the periodic table is

organized as it relates to valence electrons.3. How reactive are the elements in group 1

the alkali metals? Why?4. What is the difference between an ion and

an atom?5. What are polyatomic ions?6. Are elements with 1-7 valence electrons

stable or reactive? Why?

Page 6: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Bell Ringer #11. What are valence electrons?2. Summarize how the periodic table is

organized as it relates to valence electrons.3. How reactive are the elements in group 1 –

7 the alkali metals? Why?4. What is the difference between an ion and

an atom?5. What are polyatomic ions?6. Are elements with 1-7 valence electrons

stable or reactive? Why?

Page 7: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Education is not

received.It is achieved.

Page 8: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

A Mad Scientist’s Chemistry Presentation

A Mad Scientist’s Chemistry Presentation

Atoms, Bonding, and thePeriodic Table

Chapter 5

Page 9: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

• Valence electrons are the electrons that have the highest energy level and are held most loosely.

Which means what?• The energy level determines the

properties and bonding of atoms.• Each element has a range of 1-8

valence electrons.• Valence electrons are shown with electron

dot diagram – each dot = 1 electron.

Valence Electrons and Bonding

Page 10: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Chemical Bonds and Stability

Atoms of most elements are Atoms of most elements are moremore stable when they have 8 stable when they have 8 valencevalence electrons. electrons. Atoms usually react in 2 waysAtoms usually react in 2 ways

1.The number of valence 1.The number of valence electrons increases to 8 electrons increases to 8 electrons.electrons.

2.The atom gives up 2.The atom gives up loosely heldloosely held valence electrons causing valence electrons causing aa chemical bond. chemical bond.

Page 11: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Chemical Bonds and Chemical Reactions

When atoms bond, electrons are transferred so chemical reaction occurs and new substances are made.

Page 12: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

How the Periodic Table Works Knowing the number of valence

electrons is a clue as to how elements combine. Take out your periodic table now

All of the elements in a group have similar properties because they have the SAME number of valence electrons

NOBLE GASES – all have 8 valence electrons except helium

with 2– most are stable with 8 electrons and most

are unreactive other elements

Page 13: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Reactive Nonmetals and Metals

• HALOGENSEach atom has 7 valence electronsthat react with elements who give up 1 electron.

• ALKALI METALSAlkali metals have only have 1 valence electron and very reactive.

Page 14: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

OTHER METALS Groups 3-12 have either 1, 2, or 3

valence electrons How reactive a metal is depends on

how easily its atoms lose valence electrons.

OTHER NONMETALS *have either 4, 5, or 6 valence

electrons*try to get to 8 valence electrons so they react easily

Page 15: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

OTHER METALS

METALLOIDS-have from 3 to 6 valence electrons-lose or share electrons

HYDROGEN- only 1 valence electron- with the alkali metals but NOT a metal- very reactive

Page 16: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

SECTION 2

Page 17: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Bell Ringer• Read and study the Bell Ringer questions from

yesterday• Re-read section 1 of chapter 5….. P. 150• You may be having a quiz on this

Page 18: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Ions and Ionic Bonds

• Ions are atoms with an electric charge.

• If atom loses an electron then it becomes positive.

• If atom gains an electron then it becomes negative.

• Polyatomic ions are ions made of more than 1 atom.

Page 19: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Ions and Ionic Bonds continued

They can be either positive or negative.

The attraction between the 2 opposite charges is called ionic bond.

Ionic compounds have positive and negative ions (NaCl).

Page 20: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Chemical Formulas & Names

• A combination of symbols that shows the ratio of elements

• Always have balanced charges• The number is called the

subscript– it shows the ratio of elements

Page 21: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Chemical Formulas & Names continued

• The positive ion always comes first.

• If negative is single element then name ends in -ide (MgO = magnesium oxide).

• If negative ion is polyatomic then name ends in –ate or –ite (NH4NO3 = ammonium nitrate)

Page 22: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Properties of Ionic Compounds

• Ionic compounds are hard, brittle crystals

• High melting points • Strong bonds – lots of energy to

break apart• Can conduct electricity in water

– If ionic crystals dissolve in water, the bonds break apart moving in water so they will conduct electricity.

• Form in orderly, 3D way called a crystal

Page 23: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Bell Ringer #2

1. Name 3 properties of ionic compounds.2. Which ion comes first? positive or negative 3. Table salt is NaCl. What is the ratio?4. How do ionic compounds form?

Page 24: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

Review

Page 25: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

CHEMICAL FORMULAS

1. Turn to p. 159 in the book.2. This will be turned and graded.3. Using the chart, copy each chemical name and

write the chemical formula.1. Remember that the positive ion goes 1st

2. The formula has to balance

Page 26: Bell Ringer # 1 1. Which of the following is the basis for arranging the elements in the modern periodic table? A. Alphabetical order B. Masses of atoms

1. lithium fluoride2. sodium chloride3. potassium iodide4. calcium sulfide5. magnesium

carbonate6. aluminum phosphate7. ammonium oxide

8. lithium phosphate9. ammonium sulfate10. sodium carbonate11. potassium sulfide12. magnesium nitrate13. calcium chloride14. ammonium

phosphate