Trends

Cards (22)

  • Group 1 elements

    Get more reactive going down the group
  • Group 1 elements

    • Li
    • Na
    • Rb
    • Cs
  • Group 7 elements

    Get less reactive going down the group
  • Group 7 elements
    • Cl
    • Br
    • At
  • You can explain these trends by looking at the electronic structures and how the atoms tend to lose or gain electrons in their reactions
  • Reactivity within groups
    • As you go down a group in the periodic table, the number of shells occupied by electrons increases, by one extra electron shell per period
    • Atoms become larger going down any group
  • Larger atoms

    Lose electrons more easily going down a group
  • Larger atoms

    Gain electrons less easily going down a group
  • Atoms of alkali metals tend to lose electrons when they form chemical bonds
  • Atoms of the halogens tend to gain electrons
  • The size of the positive charge on the nucleus

    Becomes larger as you go down a group, as more protons are present inside the nucleus
  • The increasing nuclear charge
    Suggests that the attraction for the outer electron should get stronger
  • The greater distance and the shielding effect of inner electrons

    Outweigh the increasing nuclear charge
  • The change from Li to Li+
    Takes more energy than Na changing to Na+, shielded by more inner shells of electrons than lithium's outer electron
  • In Group 1, the outer electron
    Gets easier to remove going down the group and the elements get more and more reactive
  • Reactivity decreases going down Group 7
  • Factors to explain the trend in Group 7
    • The size of the atom
    • The shielding effect of inner electrons
    • The nuclear charge
  • When Group 7 elements react, their atoms
    Gain an electron in their outermost shell (highest energy level)
  • Going down the group, the outermost shell's electrons
    Get further away from the attractive force of the nucleus, so it is harder to attract and gain an extra incoming electron
  • The outer shell

    Will also be shielded by more inner shells of electrons, again reducing the electrostatic attraction of the nucleus for an incoming electron
  • The effect of the increased nuclear charge going down the group
    Is outweighed by the effect of increased distance and shielding by more inner electrons
  • Chlorine is less reactive than fluorine

    The attraction for the incoming electron when F changes to F- is much greater than when Cl changes to Cl-