m2,3 - ionisation energy + periodicity Flashcards
first ionisation energy def
the amount of energy required to remove
one electron from
each atom
of one mole of gaseous atoms
(to give one mole of gaseous 1+ ions)
800, 2400, 3700, 25000
explain why 2nd IE is greater than 1st IE
electrons experience more attraction to the +ve nucleus, as each electron is removed there is less repulsion and each shell is drawn closer to the nucleus, so the electrons require more energy to release them.
800, 2400, 3700, 25000
which group is this element likely to be in?
group 3, the large difference in IE between the 3rd and 4th electron shows the 4th electron was taken from a shell closer to the nucleus.
what effects ionisation energy
nuclear charge - greater the nuclear charge the stronger the attractive force experienced by outer electrons
atomic radius - greater the atomic radius the weaker the nuclear attraction experienced by outer electrons
electron shielding - the repulsion between e- in different inner shells. inner shell e- repel outer shell e-. the more inner shells the stronger the shielding effect and so the less the attractive force experienced by the outer electron
trend of first ionisation energy for first 20 elements…
noble gases
across periods
Be-B and Mg-Al
N-O and P-S
- noble gases have the highest IE in their period, because atoms have a full outer shell so a higher positive attraction from the nucleus
- increase across periods because: nuclear charge inc, so higher attraction on electrons. e- are added to the same shell so outer shell is drawn in slightly
- small decrease from Be-B and Mg-Al, because they have a p orbital (has higher energy than s orbitals) so are marginally further from the nucleus (so e- are easier to remove so have lower IE)
- small decrease from N-O and P-S, because outermost e- is now spin paired. these e- experience some repulsion which makes first outer electron easier to remove
ionisation energy down the groups:
atomic radius
nuclear charge
electron shielding
atomic radius increases (more shells)
nuclear charge increases
electron shielding increases
ionisation energy decreases (e- further from nucleus, more shielding, e- held less strongly)
ionisation energy across the periods:
atomic radius
nuclear charge
electron shielding
atomic radius decreases (increased nuclear charge attracts e- (and pulls them closer))
nuclear charge increases
electron shielding stays the same (no new shells)
ionisation energy increases (increased nuclear charge attracts e-, become harder to remove)
first ionisation energy equation for eg Al
Al (g) -> Al+ (g) + e-
periodicity def
a repeating trend in chemical or physical properties along a period