The Periodic Table (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Richard Boole

Expertise

Chemistry

How the Elements are Ordered

How the Periodic Table has developed

  • In 1869, Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev created his first draft of the Periodic Table

  • He organised elements into columns based on their properties and the properties of their compounds

  • He then arranged them horizontally in order of increasing atomic weight

  • He noticed a pattern appearing where chemically similar elements fell into the same columns

    • There were exceptions, as some elements didn't fit the pattern of increasing atomic weight

  • Mendeleev worked to include all the elements, but:

    • He didn't force an element to fit the pattern, instead he left gaps for elements that had not yet been discovered

    • He also switched the order of the elements to maintain consistency down the columns

Mendeleev's Periodic Table

Diagram of Mendeleev's Periodic Table showing patterns in groups and leaving gaps for undiscovered elements
Mendeleev's Periodic Table showing gaps
  • He used the properties and trends of other elements in the group with the gap to predict the properties of undiscovered elements

  • Elements were later discovered that fitted Mendeleev's pattern and confirmed his theories

    • For example, Mendeleev predicted an element called “eka-silicon”

    • This element is now known as germanium

The current Periodic Table

  • Over 100 chemical elements have been isolated and identified

  • The Periodic Table arranges elements in order of increasing atomic number

    • Each element has one proton more than the element preceding it

    • This is done so that elements end up in columns with other elements which have similar properties

  • The table is arranged in:

    1. Vertical columns called groups

    2. Rows called periods

  • The name Periodic Table comes from these groups and periods

    • It reflects that there is a regular, or periodic, pattern of elements with similar properties

The Periodic Table

The Periodic Table is arranged in groups (columns) and periods (rows)
The Periodic Table is arranged in groups (columns) and periods (rows)

Periods

  • The periods / horizontal rows on the Periodic Table are numbered from 1 - 7

    • Note: Period numbers are not always shown on the Periodic Table

  • They show the number of energy levels / electron shells an atom has:

    • Atoms of a Period 2 element have two energy levels / electron shells

    • Atoms of a Period 3 element have three energy levels / electron shells

Exam Tip

  • A common exam mistake is to miss the first period

  • This happens because hydrogen is not at the top of Group 1 / the first group

  • One simple way to avoid this is to remember to number periods on the right-hand side of the Periodic Table as helium is at the top of Group 0

Groups

  • The groups / vertical columns on the Periodic Table are numbered from 1 - 7, with Group 0 at the end

    • Note: The final group is normally called Group 0 instead of Group 8

  • These group numbers show how many outer electrons / valence electrons an atom has:

    • Atoms of a Group 4 element have 4 electrons in their highest energy level / outermost shell

    • Atoms of a Group 6 element have 6 electrons in their highest energy level / outermost shell

  • The number of outer electrons determines the chemistry of the element

    • So, all elements in a group have similar chemical properties

Group 0 - the Noble gases

  • The elements in Group 0 of the Periodic Table are called the Noble gases

  • The Noble gases are all non-metals that exist as single atoms

Noble Gases on the Periodic Table

Periodic Table highlighting the noble gases - they occupy the group furthest to the right 
Periodic Table highlighting the noble gases
  • All of the Noble gases have a full highest energy level / outer electron shell

    • Electronic configurations of the Noble gases:

      • He = 2

      • Ne = 2, 8

      • Ar =  2, 8, 8

      • Kr =  2, 8, 18, 8

      • Xe = 2, 8, 18, 18, 8

  • These electronic configurations make the Noble gases extremely stable and unreactive

    • This is because elements react to achieve a full / complete outer shell by losing, gaining, or sharing electrons

    • Group 0 elements do not need to do this as their outer shells are already full

Exam Tip

  • Take care talking about electron shells:

    • Helium has a full outer shell with only 2 electrons.

    • The remaining Noble gases have a full outer shell with 8 electrons.

      • This is why the Noble gases are sometimes labelled Group 8

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Richard Boole

Author: Richard Boole

Richard has taught Chemistry for over 15 years as well as working as a science tutor, examiner, content creator and author. He wasn’t the greatest at exams and only discovered how to revise in his final year at university. That knowledge made him want to help students learn how to revise, challenge them to think about what they actually know and hopefully succeed; so here he is, happily, at SME.