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โš—๏ธ Chemistry ยท Periodic Table

Periodic table tricks that make elements stick

Groups, periods, trends, and element symbols โ€” the shortcuts every chem student needs.

โš—๏ธ Periodic Table

Memory tricks

Proven mnemonics โ€” fast to learn, hard to forget.

โš—๏ธ Periodic Table
Groups go down, Periods go across
Groups vs Periods
Groups are columns, periods are rows โ€” never mix them up
Groups (vertical columns) share similar chemical properties. Periods (horizontal rows) represent the same number of electron shells. Group 1 = alkali metals. Period 2 = Li through Ne.
โš—๏ธ Periodic Table
Atomic radius: bigger going down-left
Periodic Trend โ€” Atomic Radius
Atomic radius increases down and to the left on the table
Going down a group: more electron shells = larger atom. Going left across a period: fewer protons pulling electrons in = larger atom. Smallest elements are top-right. Largest are bottom-left.
โš—๏ธ Periodic Table
Electronegativity: bigger going up-right
Periodic Trend โ€” Electronegativity
Electronegativity is opposite of atomic radius
Electronegativity increases going up and to the right. Fluorine is the most electronegative element (3.98). Cesium and Francium are least electronegative. Think: top-right corner is "greedy" for electrons.
โš—๏ธ Periodic Table
Alkali metals: soft, reactive, 1 valence electron
Group 1 Properties
Group 1 alkali metals โ€” key properties for every exam
Li, Na, K, Rb, Cs, Fr. All have 1 valence electron, making them extremely reactive. They react violently with water. Reactivity increases down the group. Never found pure in nature.
Halogens
Halogens (Group 17): F Cl Br I At โ€” very reactive, form salts with metals
Halogens
Group 17 elements โ€” one electron short of a full outer shell
Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, Iodine, Astatine. All need one more electron โ†’ extremely reactive. React violently with alkali metals to form salts (NaCl = sodium chloride). Reactivity decreases going down the group. F is the most reactive element on the periodic table.
Noble Gases
Noble gases (Group 18): He Ne Ar Kr Xe Rn โ€” full outer shells, almost no reactions
Noble Gases
Group 18 โ€” the most stable elements, almost completely unreactive
Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, Radon. Full valence shells โ†’ no need to gain or lose electrons โ†’ extremely stable and unreactive. Used in light bulbs, lasers, balloons. 'He Never Argues, Kinda Xenophobic Really' โ€” He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn.
Transition Metals
Transition metals: variable oxidation states, colored compounds, good conductors
Transition Metals
The large middle block โ€” Groups 3-12
Fill the d subshell. Variable oxidation states: iron can be Feยฒโบ or Feยณโบ. Form colored compounds (copper sulfate = blue, potassium dichromate = orange). Good electrical and heat conductors. Catalysts: iron in Haber process, platinum in catalytic converters.
Ionization Energy Trend
Ionization energy: energy to REMOVE an electron. Increases going up and right on the table.
Ionization Energy Trend
The energy needed to pull an electron away from an atom
High ionization energy = harder to remove electron = more stable. Increases across a period (more protons pulling electrons in). Decreases down a group (electrons further from nucleus). Noble gases have highest IE. Alkali metals have lowest. Opposite trend to atomic radius.
Electron Configuration Order
Electron configuration: fill orbitals in order โ€” 1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d...
Electron Configuration Order
The Aufbau principle โ€” how electrons fill atomic orbitals
Fill lowest energy orbitals first. Order: 1s, 2s, 2p, 3s, 3p, 4s, 3d, 4p, 5s, 4d, 5p... Diagonal rule (Madelung rule) explains why 4s fills before 3d. Pauli exclusion: max 2 electrons per orbital. Hund's rule: one electron per orbital before pairing.
Periodic Table Regions
Metals vs Nonmetals: left of staircase = metals. Right = nonmetals. On the line = metalloids.
Periodic Table Regions
Three broad regions of the periodic table โ€” and the staircase divides them
Metals (left): shiny, malleable, ductile, conduct heat and electricity. Nonmetals (right): dull, brittle, poor conductors. Metalloids/semimetals (on the staircase: B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te): properties of both โ€” semiconductors. Silicon is the basis of computer chips.
Valence Electrons
Valence electrons = group number for main group elements. Determines reactivity.
Valence Electrons
The outer electrons that determine how an element reacts
Group 1: 1 valence electron. Group 2: 2. Groups 13-18: 3-8. Elements react to achieve 8 valence electrons (octet rule). Lose electrons โ†’ cation (metals). Gain electrons โ†’ anion (nonmetals). The valence electrons are shown in Lewis dot structures.
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