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The History of the Modern Periodic Table

The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

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Page 1: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

The History of the Modern

Periodic Table

Page 2: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Objectives:

• Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic table

• Be able to identify Alkali Metals, Alkali Earth Metals, Transition Metals, Non-metals, Semi-metals, and Nobel gasses on the periodic table

• Discuss the difference between a group and a family on the periodic table

• * this symbol means write this down!

Page 3: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

During the nineteenth century, chemists began to categorize

the elements according to similarities in their physical and chemical properties. The end result of these studies was our

modern periodic table.

Page 4: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Johann Dobereiner*

1780 - 1849

Model of triads*

In 1829, he classified some elements into groups of three, which he called triads.The elements in a triad had similar chemical properties and orderly physical properties.

(ex. Cl, Br, I andCa, Sr, Ba)

Page 5: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

John Newlands*

1838 - 1898

Law of Octaves*

In 1863, he suggested that elements be arranged in “octaves” because he noticed (after arranging the elements in order of increasing atomic mass) that certain properties repeated every 8th element.

Page 6: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

John Newlands

1838 - 1898 Law of Octaves

Newlands' claim to see a repeating pattern was met with savage ridicule on its announcement. His classification of the elements, he was told, was as arbitrary as putting them in alphabetical order and his paper was rejected for publication by the Chemical Society.

Page 7: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

John Newlands

1838 - 1898 Law of Octaves

His law of octaves failed beyond the element calcium. WHY?

Would his law of octaves work today with the first 20 elements?

Page 8: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Dmitri Mendeleev*

1834 - 1907

In 1869 he published a table of the elements organized by increasing atomic mass.*

Page 9: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Lothar Meyer

1830 - 1895

At the same time, he published his own table of the elements organized by increasing atomic mass. (You do not need to know this

name at this time)

Page 10: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Elements known at this time

Page 11: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

• Both Mendeleev and Meyer arranged the elements in order of increasing atomic mass.

• Both left vacant spaces where unknown elements should fit.

So why is Mendeleev called the “father of the modern periodic table” and not Meyer, or both?

Page 12: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

• if the atomic weight of an element caused it to be placed in the wrong group, then the weight must be wrong. (He corrected the atomic masses of various elements)

• predicted physical properties of unknown elements.

Mendeleev...

Page 13: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

After discovery of these unknown elements between 1874 and 1885, and the fact that Mendeleev’s predictions for Sc, Ga, and Ge were amazingly close to the actual values, his table was generally accepted.

Page 14: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

However, in spite of Mendeleev’s great achievement, problems arose when new elements were discovered and more accurate atomic weights determined. By looking at our modern periodic table, can you identify what problems might have caused chemists a headache?

Ar and KCo and NiTe and I

Th and Pa

Page 15: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Henry Moseley*

1887 - 1915

In 1913, through his work with X-rays, •determined the actual nuclear charge (atomic number) of the elements*.

•rearranged the elements in order of increasing atomic number.**“There is in the atom a

fundamental quantity which increases by regular steps as we pass from each element to the next. This quantity can only be the charge on the central positive nucleus.”

Page 16: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Henry Moseley

His research was halted when the British government sent him to serve as a foot soldier in WWI. He was killed in the fighting in Gallipoli by a sniper’s bullet, at the age of 28. Because of this loss, the British government later restricted its scientists to noncombatant duties during WWII.

Page 17: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Glenn T. Seaborg*After co-discovering 10 new elements, in 1944 he moved 14 elements out of the main body of the periodic table* to their current location below the Lanthanide series. These became knownas the Actinide series.

1912 - 1999

Page 18: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Glenn T. SeaborgHe is the only person to have an element named after him while still alive.

1912 - 1999

"This is the greatest honor ever bestowed upon me - even better, I think, thanwinning the Nobel Prize."

Page 19: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Periodic Table Geography

Page 20: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

The horizontal rows of the periodic table are called PERIODS.*

Page 21: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

The vertical columns of the periodic table are called GROUPS, or FAMILIES.*

The elements in any group of the periodic table have similar physical and chemical properties!*

Page 22: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Periodic Law• When elements are arranged in

order of increasing atomic weight, there is a periodic pattern in their physical and chemical properties, with three exceptions:

– What are they?

Page 23: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

New Periodic Law*When elements are arranged in order of increasing atomic number, there is a periodic pattern in their physical and chemical properties.*

No exceptions now.

Page 24: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Alkali Metals*

Page 25: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Alkaline Earth Metals*

Page 26: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Transition Metals*

Page 27: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

InnerTransition Metals*

These elements are also called the rare-earth

elements.

Page 28: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Halogens*

Page 29: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Noble Gases*

Page 30: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Where would metaloids be?Which Elements?*

Page 31: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

The s and p block elementsare called

REPRESENTATIVE ELEMENTS.

Page 32: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

The periodic table is the most important tool in the chemist’s

toolbox!

Page 33: The History of the Modern Periodic Table. Objectives: Know about Dobreiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley and Seaborg and their contributions to the periodic

Welcome to the family!*• There is a project due next week

– You and your family will introduce yourselves to the class well enough that we feel we are a part of your family.

– You will likely want to have a family reunion or two to discuss what your family is like.

– Your clicker number represents your element (Clicker numbers are posted beneath the calculators. Numbers 23 and 24 are Lanthanides, 25 and 26 are Actinides)

– Get to know a little about yourself and your family this week (Exchange [quantum] numbers).

– Rubrics are on page 24 of your packet.