Periodicity Flashcards

1
Q

Metallic Lattice

A

Li, Be, Na, Mg, Al, K, Ca

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2
Q

Covalent Molecular

A

H2, N2, O2, F2, CL2, P4, S8 and fullerenes (e.g. C60)

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3
Q

Covalent Network

A

B, C (diamond & graphite), Si

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4
Q

Monatomic

A

Noble Gases

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5
Q

What is the covalent radius?

A

It is the measure of the size of an atom.

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6
Q

What happens to the covalent radius across a period?

A

Across a period - the covalent radius decreases as the nuclear charge increases (higher nuclear charge pulls the electrons in closer)

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7
Q

What happens to the covalent radius down a group?

A

Down a group - the covalent radius increases as the number of occupied shells increase (more shells = bigger atom)

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8
Q

Describe the first ionisation energy

A

It is the energy required to remove one mole of electrons from one mole of gaseous atoms.

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9
Q

Describe the second ionisation energy

A

It is the energy required to remove the 2nd mole of electrons.

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10
Q

What happens to the ionisation energy across a period?

A

Across a period - the ionisation energy tends to increase as the nuclear charge increases.

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11
Q

What happens to the ionisation energy down a group?

A

Down a group - the ionisation energy decreases as there are more shells, which means there is an increases shielding effect due to the inner electrons (makes it easier to remove the outer ones)

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12
Q

Definition of Electronegativity:

A

electronegativity is the measure of attraction an atom involved in a bond has for the electrons in a bond.

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13
Q

What happens to electronegativity across a period?

A

Across a period - the electronegativity values increase due to the nuclear charge increasing (higher positive nuclear charge will mean the negative electrons will be more attracted)

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14
Q

What happens to electronegativity down a group?

A

Down a group - the electronegativity decreases, this is due to the screening effect (of the inner shell electrons) - they will ‘shield’ the nuclear charge.

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