The Periodic Table
The Periodic Table
The Periodic Table
Copyright 2008 by Infobase Publishing All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher. For information contact: Chelsea House An imprint of Infobase Publishing 132 West 31st Street New York NY 10001 library of congress cataloging-in-Publication data Ham, Becky. The Periodic table / Becky Ham. p. cm. (Essential chemistry) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-7910-9533-1 (hardcover) ISBN-10: 0-7910-9533-9 (hardcover) 1. Periodic lawTables. 2. Chemical elements. I. Title. II. Series. QD467.H335 2007 546'.8dc22 2007022400
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What Is the Periodic Table? The History of the Periodic Table What Elements Are Made of Alkali Metals and Alkaline Earth Metals Transition Metals Lanthanides, Actinides, and Transuranium Elements
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Poor Metals, Metalloids, and Nonmetals: 65 The BCNOs Halogens and Noble Gases At the Tables Edge
Periodic Table of the Elements Electron Configurations Table of Atomic Masses Glossary Bibliography Further Reading Index Photo Credits About the Author 77 86 92 94 96 98 105 108 110 114 114
in all countries. Other images included snowflakes, houses, an Xray of a hand, diagrams of a woman giving birth, crocodiles, and even an astronaut in space. The golden record also included greetings from Earth in 55 different languages, 90 minutes of music from around the world, and noises such as the sound of a chirping cricket, the wind in a storm, and laughter. The cover of the golden record was marked with simple math symbols and drawings that explained what the record was and how it should be played. Although it did not make it onto the golden record, there is one picture that could have explained all the materials that make up the people, animals, plants, rocks, oceans, and the rest of Earth. That picture is the periodic table of the elements. The periodic table answers the question what are things made of? If it sounds like something a small child might ask, it is good to remember that the answer was not obvious for thousands of years of human history. Before the question was answered, the periodic table did not exist, even in the imaginations of the most thoughtful scientists. Today, we know that things are made of elements. An element is a basic building block of matter. Matter is the material that makes up everything in the universe, from stars to spacecraft to golden records. The periodic table is a list of all the basic building blocks of matter that are found naturally, along with some building blocks that have been created in the laboratory here on Earth.
Figure 1.1 Chicago boasted the worlds largest exhibition of the periodic table of the elements with this display on the exterior of the Richard J. Daley Center.
Oxygen and hydrogen are elements because they are the smallest blocks of a certain kind of matter. Oxygen cannot be broken down into anything else. Hydrogen cannot be broken down into anything else. If a piece of matter cannot be broken down into more than one type of matter, it is an element. The periodic table is more than just a list of elements. After all, a list could take any shape. The periodic table takes its shape from the way elements are related to each other. The shape of the table can predict what a certain element might look like, even if it has never been seen before. The shape of the periodic table can be used to tell which elements will react with others. The shape of the
periodic table can even be used to picture the smallest particles of an element, particles far smaller than anything the human eye or even most microscopes could ever see. The modern periodic table first appeared as a page for a chemistry textbook, written by a teacher who thought his students needed an easy way to look at the elements. The shape of the table made it world-famous, for all the reasons mentioned. The carefully stacked rows and columns made a simple list into a useful tool and a snapshot of how matter is organized on Earth and throughout the universe.
summary
The periodic table is a chart that includes all of the natural and artificial elements known in the universe. Elements are basic building blocks of matter. The periodic table is more than a list of the elements. It is also a guide and tool to understanding all chemical reactions and the materials involved in building the Earth and the universe. This book will describe the history and science behind the periodic table and take an in-depth look at all the major groups of elements.
Thousands of years ago, people knew about elements such as tin, copper, gold, silver, and even mercury, but they did not think of them as basic building blocks. Ancient Greek scholars thought that the real elements of the world were opposites such as hot, cold, wet, and dryor materials such as fire, earth, air, and water that were made by combining these opposites. In China, philosophers recognized five xing, or phases of fire, earth, water, wood, and metal. The Greek philosopher Aristotle (384322 b.c.) thought a material like gold could be built by combining elements, such as fire and earth, in the right pattern. There was one early hint at the modern way of thinking of elements, from the ancient Greek scholar Democritus (~460 ~370 b.c.), who thought that materials like fire were made up of tiny invisible particles that could not be broken into smaller pieces. The word he used for these particles is atomos. Atoms, as they are called today, are the particles that make up elements. The element gold is made up of gold atoms; the element lead is made of lead atoms, and so on. Aristotles idea that the four ancient elements could be mixed into any kind of material sparked a centuries-long interest in alchemy. Part scientists and part philosophers, alchemists looked for ways to change plain metals, such as lead, into more valuable metals, like gold. If Aristotle was right, the two metals were simply different arrangements of the same four elements. The alchemists searched for a method to change these elements arrangement in lead into their arrangement in gold. Some alchemists were little more than con men who tried to convince others that they could do things like make gold out of thin air or cure any disease with a pure potion they called acqua vitae. Many alchemists worked like scientists, testing different ideas about matter with careful experiments. Their studies paved the way for the first true chemists and the modern definition of an element.
Figure 2.1 John Dalton surmised that each element is made of atoms specific to that ele- ment. This theory led to the modern understand- ing of atomic mass: Each element has a different mass because of its unique atomic composition.
that could not be broken down into another substance. Lavoisier named more than 30 elements himself, before his head was cut off by the guillotine during the French Revolution. Although he was a brilliant scientist, Lavoisier also worked as a tax collector for the government and was a member of the aristocratic class, which made him unpopular with the revolutionaries. John Dalton (17661844), a science teacher in England, combined the idea of the atom and Lavoisiers new definition of elements. He suggested that there were different kinds of atoms behind different elements. In this case, gold was built out of gold atoms, and lead was built out of lead atoms. Dalton also figured out a way to estimate the weight of each kind of atom. Other
chemists had noticed that elements always combined together in a certain way. For instance, hydrogen always made up 15% of the weight of water, whereas oxygen accounted for 85% of waters weight. Using these numbers, Dalton figured out how much a hydrogen atom and an oxygen atom weigh. Scientists began to organize the growing list of elements with the help of these atomic weights.
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Figure 2.2 Dmitri Mendeleyev, a Russian chemistry teacher, devised the periodic table as a reference for his chemistry students. His work provided the foundation for todays periodic table.
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Figure 2.3 Mendeleyev first organized his table so that the ele- ments were situated vertically by atomic mass and horizontally according to their physical and chemical properties. Mendeleyev left spaces within his table, sensing that there were other elemen- tal pieces of the puzzle to be discovered.
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Figure 2.4 This version of Mendeleyevs periodic table was published in 1925. The elements have been rearranged from Mendeleyevs original list into a more acces- sible and better-structured model.
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atomic weight, even though no element of that weight had been discovered yet. He even predicted what those missing elements would look like, based on the pattern he had figured out for the table. He left blank spaces below boron, aluminum, and silicon, but he predicted that elements would be found for each of these spaces.
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He predicted their atomic weights and other features such as their melting and boiling points. He even predicted how they would react with other common elements like oxygen. The first blank was filled in 1875. A French chemist discovered an elementgalliumthat had all the properties Mendeleyev predicted for the space below aluminum. In 1879, a Swedish researcher discovered scandium, which looked and acted exactly how Mendeleyev said it would in its place below boron. In 1886, a German scientist discovered germanium, the element below silicon. Its chemical properties were almost exactly what Mendeleyev had predicted. The three discoveries helped make Mendeleyevs table more than just a clever way of arranging the elements. His amazingly accurate predictions about the new elements made it clear to other scientists that his table was something more than a fancy list. It was a powerful tool that could be used to hunt down new elements. It was a hypothesis, a scientific statement about the world that researchers could use to test other questions in chemistry. Mendeleyev is famous today as the father of the periodic table because he was the first to recognize that the elements followed a pattern in real life, not just in chemists notebooks. He did not make the periodic table of elements; he discovered it. The pattern already existed in nature; now it was up to Mendeleyev and others to figure out where elements belonged in the pattern.
summary
Ancient cultures thought there were only a handful of elements that made up all the matter in the world. The idea that these few elements could be mixed into any material led to the development of alchemy. Part scientists and part philosophers, alchemists searched for a way to turn common metal into gold. Their experiments paved the way for true chemists research in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Experiments by Robert Boyle, Antoine Laurent de Lavoisier, John Dalton, and others led to new
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definitions of an element. Later classifications of elements eventually led to the modern periodic table created by Dmitri Mendeleyev. Mendeleyevs table became a success when he correctly predicted new element discoveries.
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smaller particles: the proton, the neutron, and the electron. Protons have a positive electrical charge, electrons have a negative electrical charge, and neutrons have no charge at all. Usually, an atom has the same number of protons and electrons. The positive and negative electrical charges of these two types of particles cancel each other out, such that an atom has no overall charge. Some atoms do have an overall positive or negative electrical charge, because they have an extra electron or are missing an electron. These charged atoms are called ions. Protons and neutrons clump together to form the center of an atom, called the nucleus. The positive electrical charge of the protons attracts the negatively charged electrons in the same way the opposite poles of a magnet pull toward each other. This pull holds the electrons around the nucleus as if they were planets orbiting a sun, although the paths they take around the nucleus are not as steady or predictable as a planets orbit. Instead, electrons move around the nucleus through wide spaces called electron shells that wrap around the nucleus like the layers of an onion. An element can be defined by the number of protons in its atoms. All hydrogen atoms have only one proton, whereas all iron atoms have 26 protons and all gold atoms have 47 protons. The number of neutrons can vary, and there are usually more neutrons than protons in elements heavier than aluminum. Atoms of the same element that have different atomic weights due to different numbers of neutrons in the nucleus are called isotopes. Most of the weight of an atom comes from its protons and neutrons. Protons and neutrons have nearly the same mass, or to put it another way, they contain nearly the same amounts of matter. A proton has almost 2,000 times more mass than an electron. When Mendeleyev first arranged his periodic table, he put the known elements in order of atomic weight. In the modern table, elements are arranged instead by atomic numberthe number of
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protons they contain. The atomic number and the atomic weight are different because atomic weight also includes the contribution of electrons and neutrons. Luckily for Mendeleyev, the elements fall into roughly the same order whether they are ranked by atomic number or atomic weight.
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Figure 3.1 The first two periods of the periodic table are shown above.
increases. As the number of electrons increases, shell 2 quickly fills up. At neon (atomic number 10), shells 1 (two electrons) and 2 (eight electrons) are both full. But now what? Sodium, which starts the third row, has 11 electrons. The first 10 can go into shells 1 and 2, but the leftover electron has to go into shell 3.
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Figure 3.2 These are the electron shells of the sodium atom. The three shells of electrons (red spheres) increase in energy the farther they are from the nucleus (blue sphere).
This glimpse at the first elements in the table indicates a certain pattern. Electrons fill up energy shells around each atoms nucleus according to this pattern.
Is there an easy way to tell whether an element will be reactive or nonreactive? Again, the pattern of the periodic table can help with the answer. Each element in the first column of the table (except for hydrogen, a special case that will be discussed later) represents the start of a new electron shell. Lithiums third electron
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Figure 3.3 The periodic table is shown with its various blocks of orbitals.
is the first electron and only electron in shell 2. Sodiums eleventh electron is the first electron and only electron in shell 3, and so on down the column. Each of these elements is very reactive because they try to give away these lonely outermost electrons, known as valence electrons, to other elements. Across a row, as the number of protons (and electrons) increases and the valence shell fills up, elements become less reactive. In
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general, this means that elements in columns at the left side of the table are very reactive and become less reactive as the columns move from left to right. Elements in columns act similarly in chemical reactions, simply because they are showing the same kind of electron face to other elements. There is one more complication to the electron shells. Inside the shells themselves, electrons can be found in regions called orbitals. There are four types of orbitalss, p, d, and fand each has a specific shape. Blocks of the periodic table correspond to the different orbitals. The electrons in atoms of the first row of the table are found in the 1s orbital. Helium, at the far right of the first row, consists of 2 electrons in the 1s orbital. Neon, at the far right of the second row, has two electrons in the 1s orbital, 2 electrons in the 2s orbital, and 6 electrons in the 2p orbital. These arrangements of electrons within orbitals are known as electron configurations. Chemists notate the electron configuration of helium as 1s2 and neon as 1s22s22p6.
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Figure 3.4 This version of the periodic table is called the Benfey table.
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different shapes. Researchers have built pyramids, spirals, step tables, tow- ers, and even galaxies to show how the elements are related to each other. In one triangular version, pathways between elements show how electron shells are filled. A key-shaped version shows the elements as one continuous spiral. Scientists also build periodic tables that highlight what they think is impor- tant about the elements in their particular field. For instance, one periodic table built especially for geologists and others who study earth sciences is based on the ions that elements form in nature.
continues
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Figure 3.6 Though he arranged the elements in a chart, Mendeleyev believed that a three-dimensional helix would be the most effective way to display them. This image of a chemical galaxy attempts to simulate Mendeleyevs idea in two dimensions.
several columns are included in the same group even though they have different numbers of electrons in their outermost shell. At the bottom of the periodic table, there are two periods of elements with the atomic numbers 5770 and 89102. As the table shows, these elements really should be included in periods 6 and 7. Keeping them in these periods would make the table too
long to print, so most of the time they are listed at the end to save space. These elements do have some unique features, as well. Another way to look at the periodic table is to divide the elements into metals, nonmetals, and metalloids. Most of the elements in the table are metals. Metals are usually shiny and can be bent, hammered, or pulled into many different shapes without breaking into pieces. Metals are also good conductors, which means that heat and electricity can pass through them easily. Metals tend to give up electrons when they react with other elements. From this information, one could guess that most metals are found on the left side of the table, where the valence electron shells are mostly empty. Nonmetals are not good conductors of electricity. They tend to gain or share electrons when they react with other elements, which places them closer to the right side of the table, where valence electron shells are full or almost full. Metalloids are sometimes called semiconductors. These elements can conduct electricity, although not as well as metals. They may gain or lose electrons when they react with other elements. The most famous semiconductor element is silicon, which is used to make computer chips. Metalloids are found between metals and nonmetals on the periodic table.
summary
An atom is the smallest particle of an element that still has all the properties of that element. Atoms are made up of three main particles. Protons and neutrons come together in an atoms nucleus, whereas electrons orbit the nucleus. The number of protons in an atom determines what type of element it is. The structure of the periodic table comes from the fact that electron shells are filled in a specific pattern. The rows of the table are called periods and the columns are called groups. There are other ways to divide up the table, as well.
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alkali Metals and alkaline earth Metals
lements in the first two groups of the periodic table are some of the most reactive elements known. In fact, many of the elements are so reactive that water, or in some cases air, can cause them to explode or catch fire. Although many of their names are familiar sodium, potassium, and calcium, for instanceit is rare to find these elements on their own. Instead, these elements are usually combined with another more stable element to create a compound. Sodium chloride, or table salt, is a good example of a compound. Group 1 elements, beginning with lithium (Li) and running vertically to francium (Fr), are called alkali metals. Group 2 elements, beginning with beryllium (Be) and running vertically to radium (Ra), are called the alkaline earth metals. Hydrogen (H) is usually included at the top of the alkali metals, though it is not a metal. Like the Group 1 elements, however, hydrogen also has only one electron in its outermost shell. This
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Figure 4.1 Groups 1 and 2 of the periodic table are highlighted here.
single electron in the outermost shell makes these elements very reactive. Eager to give up their lonely electron in favor of a full out- ermost shell, these elements easily combine with others. Alkaline earth metals are slightly less reactive, since they have two electrons in their valence shell. In both groups, the metals are usually silver-colored but give off brilliant colors when burned. Compounds made with alkaline
Figure 4.2 Water falls onto pure sodium metal and creates a fiery chemical reaction. Pure alkali metals such as sodium are quite volatile. Because of this, alkali metals are generally stored in oil or wax.
earth metals are often used in fireworks. These metals are also very soft. In their pure form, unmixed with any other element, some of the alkali metals can be cut as if they were a stick of butter. But cutting or handling these pure metals is a tricky task. Pure sodium metal starts to break down when it is exposed to air. Exposed to water, sodium produces hydrogen gas that sometimes catches fire. Pure potassium and cesium metals explode violently in water and potassium may catch fire in open air. Pure alkali metals are usually stored in oil or wax to keep them from exploding. Together, the alkali metals and alkaline earth metals are sometimes called the s block. The name comes from the fact that the valence electrons in these elements come from the s orbital.
glass. In other compounds, magnesium helps produce bright flares and explosive devices. Magnesium was a key ingredient in some of the bombs that unleashed firestorms in European cities during World War II. Magnesiums terrible fires are very hard to stop and can only be extinguished with large amounts of dirt or sand rather than water. Many compounds involving the alkali and alkaline earth metals are used as desiccants, or chemicals that can remove water from a material. Lithium hydride, potassium carbonate, calcium
Pay me in salT
Sodium chloridetable saltmakes everything from french fries to popcorn taste better. But is a sprinkle of salt as valuable as money? People all over the ancient world thought it was. In the eleventh century a.d., people in China stamped little cakes of salt with a royal seal and used them like coins. Roman sol- diers were given personal supplies of salt as part of their pay. The word salary comes from the Latin words salarium argentum, or salt money. Unpopular taxes on salt have also played an important role in more recent history. French farmers, angry at a large tax on salt that they were forced to buy from the government, helped overthrow the king and queen in the French Revolution. In the years leading up to the American Revolution, American colo- nists were unhappy with the British government for putting a high sales tax on salt. In 1930, the Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi and thousands of his countrymen made a famous march to the Arabian Sea to protest salt taxes by the British colonial government that ruled India at the time.
chloride, and barium acetate are all used as desiccants. For instance, calcium chloride is sometimes spread along roads to keep the dust down by holding a thin layer of water on the road surface that traps dust particles. The Group 1 and 2 metals are lightweight and combine well with other lightweight but more stable metals such as aluminum. A mixture, or alloy, of aluminum and lithium is used in airplanes and racing bike frames. Lithium is often used to make light batteries for laptop computers, digital cameras, and pacemakers. Beryllium
Figure 4.3 Doctors illuminate the intestines of a patient with the help of the alkaline earth metal barium. The patient drinks a concoction of barium sulfate that lines the stomach and intestines. Bariums chemical properties allow it to absorb X-rays, highlighting any problem areas.
is another lightweight metal used in satellites, aircraft, and nuclear weapons. (Beryllium is also the element that gives the gemstones beryl, emerald, and aquamarine their well-known blue-green
color.) Magnesium also makes a good alloy metal for lightweight machines, such as lawn mowers and tools. There are a few surprising medical uses among the alkali and alkaline earth metals. Lithium combined with chlorine has been used for decades to treat a form of depression called bipolar disorder. Scientists are not exactly sure how lithium affects depression, but they think it may somehow change chemical messages in the brain. Doctors use barium, one of the heaviest alkaline earth metals, to get a better look at the stomach and intestines. They give their patients a drink called bariumsulfate that travels to the gut. Bariums 56 electrons absorb X-rays and light up the stomach and intestines to reveal ulcers and other problems. There are a few elements in these two groups that sometimes cause health problems because they are very similar to nearby elements. For instance, a toxic type of strontium can increase the risk of bone cancer and leukemia. Strontium, just one space below calcium in the table, is so similar to calcium that the body is sometimes fooled into absorbing it like calcium in bones and teeth. The similarities between elements can also be useful, as in the case of potassium chloride. People with high blood pressure and certain heart or kidney diseases need less sodium in their diets to stay healthy. Instead of sprinkling regular table salt or sodium chloride on their meals, they may use potassium chloride for a very similar salty taste.
Hydrogens special position among the elements makes it an orphan in the periodic table. Most periodic tables place hydrogen above lithium in the alkali metals. The reason, as discussed above, is that hydrogen has one electron in its outermost shell like the rest of the alkali metals. (Actually, hydrogen has only one shell.) Some scientists, however, think that hydrogen really belongs on top of fluorine in Group 17. Instead of hydrogen having a mostly empty electron shell, they argue, it has a nearly full shellone electron away from being complete, just like the elements in Group 17. Other tables float hydrogen above the rest of the elements, since
it does not react in exactly the same way as any other group in the table. Floating or anchored, hydrogen is one of the most important elements for life on Earth. It forms more compounds than any other element. The strong bonds it forms with oxygen keep water molecules from boiling away on the Earths surface. Hydrogen bonds also make up the backbone of DNA, the molecule that holds the genetic information of every living thing. Hydrogen has its industrial uses as well. Nearly two-thirds of the worlds manufactured hydrogen is used to make ammonia (a combination of the elements nitrogen and hydrogen) for fertilizer. Hydrogen is also used in rocket fuel and in the chemical reactions that fuel nuclear reactions and hydrogen bombs. Hydrogen plays a more notorious role in the creation of hydrogenated vegetable oil. Hydrogen turns these oils into solid fats at room temperature that are most often used in fried and baked foods to make them taste better and last longer on grocery shelves. Medical researchers, however, have singled out hydrogenated oils in recent years as one possible cause of heart disease. Hydrogen may also be a clean fuel of the future, one that produces almost no pollution when it burns in a car or other engine. Although hydrogen could replace gasoline as the fuel that is burned in a car engine, most manufacturers are instead testing cars that run on hydrogen fuel cells. A fuel cell turns hydrogen into electricity that could power a car. Fuel cell technology for cars, buses, and other vehicles seems promising, but so far the fuel cells are expensive to make and are very fragile.
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Figure 4.4 The Radium Girls were women in 1920s New Jersey who painted watch faces with radium, an element that glows in the dark. Because the women were in constant contact with the radio- active element, they experienced numerous health problems years later. Some even died because of radiation poisoning.
over the body, and crumbling bones. Several of the women died soon afterward. The Radium Girls, as they came to be known, were suffering from radiation poisoning. The glowing powder that they painted on their nails and teeth for fun was a chemical time bomb waiting to rip through their cells. Years after radiums discovery in 1898 by French chemists Marie and Pierre Curie, the girls had accidentally stumbled on the terrible power of radioactivity. Radioactivity consists of tiny energy particles that are produced when the nucleus of an atom becomes unstable and falls apart.
Typically, the nucleus of an atom is glued together by a force that attracts protons to each other. When the nucleus has too many protons or not enough neutrons, this force is overwhelmed and the nucleus falls apart, or decays. Many elements have radioactive isotopes, or versions of themselves where the number of protons and neutrons in their nuclei has somehow become imbalanced. Unstable nuclei are more likely in larger atoms with their larger amounts of protons, because the forces pushing those protons away from each other are much stronger than the force attracting them together. Once again, the periodic table offers clues about which elements could be radioactive naturally. All of the elements in Period 7like francium in the alkali metals and radium in the alkaline earth metalsare large atoms with many protons. All of the Period 7 elements are radioactive. Radiationthe energy particles released by radioactive elementscan be a friend or foe to the human body. As The Radium Girls discovered, radiation can destroy cells and change the DNA in cells in a way that increases the risk of cancer. Yet radiation therapy is also widely used as a treatment for cancer, because carefully targeted radiation can be used to kill cancer cells. Years of working with radioactive elements in the lab left Marie and Pierre Curie very sick as well. In 1934, Marie Curie died of a blood disease caused by exposure to radiation. When scientists examined her lab notebooks many decades later, they uncovered her glowing and toxic fingerprints everywhere. The steady decay of radioactive elements has some other important uses. One radioactive form of cesium releases radiation at such a steady rate that the worlds most accurate clocks rely on this rate to keep time. Another timekeeper is the precise decay of radioactive potassium into the more stable element argon. Scientists use potassium-argon dating to determine the age of rocks and stone tools at ancient human sites that are more than a million years old. The researchers know how long it takes all the potassium in a rock
to turn to argon, so they measure the amount of potassium left in the rock to come up with its age.
summary
The alkali metals are found in Group 1 of the periodic table. The alkaline earth metals are found in Group 2 of the table. Elements in these two groups are soft, highly reactive metals. They are most useful to humans in compounds with other elements. The gas hydrogen is often grouped with the alkali metals, though it has special properties of its own. The larger an atom gets, the more likely it is that its nucleus will become unstable and begin to break down. The energy released in this process is called radioactivity.
transition Metals
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hen people are asked to name any element, the chances are good that they will come up with the name of a transition metal. Transition metals are found in numerous products, such as coins, jewelry, light bulbs, cars, and even some surprising places such as sunscreen and cell phones. Most people see, touch, and depend on transition metals hundreds of times each day. The transition metals are the bridge of the periodic table, including Groups 3 through 12 and Periods 4 through 7. There is a strange break within the transition metals at elements 57 and 89 in Group 3. The break marks the beginning of the lanthanides and the actinides. On the basis of their atomic numbers, these two unusual sets of elements seem to fit into the transition metal bridge. They do not act like transition metals, however, so most periodic tables pull these elements out of atomic number
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Figure 5.1 The transition metals of the periodic table are magnified here.
order and give them their own home at the bottom of the table. There is a reasonseveral reasons, actuallywhy the transi- tion metals include so many elements with recognizable names, like gold, iron, zinc, and titanium. The first clue is in their name: transition metals. All of the transition metal elements are metals.
transition Metals 5
They have the traits of metals, such as the ability to conduct electricity and the ability to be worked into different shapes. What does transition mean? A transition is a change from one thing to another. Yttrium (atomic number 39) is a very different metal from silver (atomic number 47). Even though the transition elements are all metals, Group 3 metals act very differently from Group 12 metals. The transition metals change gradually as one moves from left to right across the bridge. On the left side of the bridge, the elements have only a few electrons moving through their valence shell. Atoms with these mostly empty valence shells are more reactive, or more likely to give up the few electrons they have if they happen to encounter other atoms. This means that a transition metal like silver, which tends to hold on to its valence electrons, is less reactive than a transition metal like yttrium. The wide range of possible chemical reactions gives chemists and engineers many possibilities when it comes to making things out of transition metals. Another way to look at the transition metal bridge is to think of it as a path between metals and nonmetals. As the electron shells fill up from left to right across the periods, the elements become less like metals and more like the nonmetals to their right, especially the nonmetals in Groups 14 through 17. There is one other unusual thing about the transition metals, and it involves their valence shell electrons. Unlike most elements, the valence electrons of transition metals are not in their outermost electron shell, but from their next-to-outermost shell. The valence electrons move through the d orbital in this shell, making the transition metals the d block of the periodic table. All of these features give the transition metals some very useful properties. The metals tend to be hard, shiny, and strong. It takes high temperatures to melt and boil most of them. Most transition metals do a good job of conducting electricity and heat. Many of the elements can bind to oxygen in more than one way, which can
create many different compounds. Because the transition metals can interact with other elementsand especially oxygenin a variety of ways, they make good catalysts, or helpers that can trigger or speed up a chemical reaction. Although these metals are strong and hard, they are not brittle. They can be stretched into thin wires or pounded flat or bent in a variety of ways without breaking. For instance, a piece of gold about the size of a grain of rice can be flattened into a sheet of gold about 10 square feet (.93 square meters), big enough to carpet a small bedroomalthough that carpet would be only a few atoms thick.
indusTrial gianTs
There are transition metals in many of the products that people use in daily life. Some of these metals have obvious roles, such as the coin metals of gold, silver, and copper. Iron, which makes up 90% of all metal that is refined, or purified for use, is found in everything from tools to paper staples to washing machines. The most important iron product is steel, an iron-based metal alloy. Most steel made for manufacturing purposes is iron alloyed with the element carbon, which makes the steel much harder than iron alone. Several other transition metals are alloyed with iron to make different kinds of steel for different uses. Vanadium, niobium, molybdenum, manganese, chromium, and nickel are all used in steel alloys. For instance, chromium and nickel are alloyed with iron to create stainless steel, a type of steel that does not rust and is used in surgical instruments, cookware, and tools. Some famous landmarks such as the top of the Chrysler skyscraper in New York City and the St. Louis Gateway Arch are covered in stainless steel. Another industrially important transition metal is titanium, which is used especially to make light but strong industrial parts, such as pipes and airplane propellers. When it is exposed to the air, titanium reacts with oxygen to form a thin layer of titanium dioxide, a compound of titanium and oxygen. The titanium dioxide protects the metal against corrosion, or the gradual breakdown
transition Metals
of the metal by environmental conditions such as salt water and strong gases. This unique feature makes titanium very useful in submarines and offshore oil rigs. The swooping walls of the
Guggenheim art museum in Bilbao, Spain, one of the most famous modern buildings in the world, are covered in corrosion-resistant titanium panels. Copper is another transition metal that does not corrode easily, which makes it useful for water pipes. Copper is also an excellent conductor of heat, which explains why copper-bottomed cooking pans have been used for centuries. Today, most copper is used in electrical wiring, since it conducts electricity so well and can be stretched into thin shapes. Other transition metals that resist corrosion include platinum, osmium, and iridium. These last two elements are often used in metal pen nibs (the tip of a fountain ink pen) and the tip of spark plugs for cars. These common uses only hint at all the things that transition metals can do. The copper penny, for instance, is mostly made of zinc, another transition metal. Chromium provides the shiny, mirror-like metal coating on chrome car bumpers, but is also added to some lasers to make their light shine red. Nickel and chromium combine in an alloy that can be coiled into the wires that heat toasters and hair dryers. Titanium dioxide is a very white reflective compound used in toothpaste and paints. The transition metal cadmium is used in brilliant and permanent colors such as cadmium yellow, red, and orange. Artists have used cadmiumbased paints for hundreds of years, and manufacturers used the colors more recently in plastic products. However, the colors are rarely used now that scientists have discovered that cadmium pollution can cause cancer and other health problems. The transition metal cobalt has its own artistic history; it is used to give a deep blue or sometimes green color to pottery and glass. Anyone who has played with a toy chemistry set has probably made invisible ink, another unusual cobalt product. Invisible ink is made from a compound of cobalt and chlorine. Dissolved in a mixture of water and a common liquid called glycerine, the ink becomes colorless. When a message written in the ink is heated, the water and glycerine break away from the
transition Metals
cobalt compound and allow its original dark color to mysteriously reappear. Everyday products also depend on less-familiar transition metals. The filament in light bulbsthe tiny thread that heats up and gives off light inside the bulbis made of the element tungsten. Tungsten can be stretched into a very thin wire, making it perfect for light bulbs. Inside each 60 watt light bulb is a 6-foot (1.93 meter)
BacTerial golddiggers
In 2006, scientists working at the Tomakin Park Gold Mine and the Hit or Miss Gold Mine in Queensland, Australia took a closer look at gold grains found in the soil around the mines. These scattered grains and nuggets are usually called secondary gold deposits, because they are not part of the big deposits of gold that form inside rocks. Erosion can break big gold deposits into secondary gold grains, but researcher Frank Reith and his fellow scientists noticed something strange about the secondary grains at the Australian mines. Most of the gold grains were coated with bacterial slime, and some of the grains actually looked like bac- teria. Oddly, the soil around the grains did not have any of the same bacterial slime in it. Whats the connection between gold and slime? The scien- tists think a bacterium called Ralstonia metallidurans is actually building these small gold nuggets from scratch. Tiny amounts of gold can be toxic for Ralstonia, so the bacteria have come up with a way to avoid it. They pull the metal from the surrounding soil into their cells and release it in the form of gold grains. In some cases, the gold coats the outside of the bacterium, leav- ing a gold-plated, bacteria-shaped nugget behind in the soil.
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tungsten wire, coiled up to fit within an inch (2.5 centimeters) of space. Yttrium oxide, a compound of the transition metal yttrium and oxygen, is used to make the red color inside the picture tubes of a color television. Silver, mostly known as a jewelry metal, also has the unusual job of rainmaker. Particles of silver iodide, a compound of silver and iodine that has a shape very similar to ice crystals, are sometimes sprayed or seeded into clouds to encourage the formation of rain droplets. Another unusual pairing of transition metals happens in floodlights like those used in football and baseball stadiums. In arena lights, mercury vapor is combined with the compound scandium iodide (a combination of the transition metal scandium and the element iodine) to make the bright lights seem more like natural sunlight. Television shows and movies also use these kinds of lights for night filming. Iridium is a lesser-known transition metal, but it has become a famous clue in the mystery of how and why the dinosaurs became extinct 65 million years ago. There is an unusually large amount of iridium in rock layers all over the world that date to the time of the dinosaur die-off. In 1980, a team of scientists suggested that the iridium came from a huge meteorite that struck the Earth 65 million years ago, creating firestorms and throwing up a huge dust cloud all around the planet. Many other plants and animals disappeared at the same time as the dinosaurs, and so far the massive meteorite strike is one of the most convincing explanations for all these extinctions. Transition metals have proved so useful throughout history that it is not surprising to find them right in the middle of some exciting plans for the future. For instance, engineers have already built a train that floats over its tracks while speeding along at more than 300 miles an hour. It sounds like science fiction, but the trains are powered by a strong magnetic force produced by coils of superconducting metal. In a superconductor, electricity flows freely without anything holding it back and scattering its energy. The transition
transition Metals 51
Figure 5.2 Scientists have created a means of revolutionary train travel. The levitation train travels over superconducting metal. This metal concentrates electricity so that it becomes an intense magnetic field. Magnetic parts in the train make the train levitate and travel at speeds close to 350 miles per hour.
metal yttrium is one of the key elements in superconducting compounds like those used in levitating trains.
medical marvels
In the 1960s, scientists performing experiments on bacteria accidentally discovered a strange effect in their lab. They grew bacteria in electric fields to see how the fields affected the bacterias dividing cells. The bacteria started growing into long strings made up of cells that were getting bigger but not dividing. After careful investigation, the researchers found that the transition metal platinum
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used in the experiment was reacting with other chemicals to make a compound called cisplatin. It was cisplatin that kept the cells from dividing normally. The scientists quickly realized that cisplatin could be a useful drug against some kinds of cancer, where cells often divide in abnormal ways. Their studies led to a number of platinumbased anticancer drugs, including cisplatin, which are still used to fight tumors. Many other transition metals have important uses in health and medicine. For instance, titanium is used to build more than airplanes. Surgeons also rely on the lightweight metal to screw together broken bones and build heart pacemakers. A radioactive version of the transition metal cobalt is used to kill harmful bacteria in some foods, like meat. Surfers and beach volleyball players slather their noses in zinc oxide compound (a combination of the transition metal zinc and the element oxygen) to stop sunburn. Gold and the transition metal palladium are widely used to build tooth crowns, the cap that dentists cement on top of a decayed tooth. Tooth fillings themselves are often an amalgam, a mixture of the transition metal mercury and other metals such as silver, tin, and copper. Although mercury can be harmful to human health, there is no evidence that these dental amalgams release enough mercury to be poisonous. One of the strangest transition metals in modern medicine is technetium, which does not exist on Earth naturally. Its half-life, or the time that it takes for half of a sample of the element to break down, is so short that all the technetium created when the Earth formed has already disappeared. But scientists have found a way to bring it back from the dead. When an isotope of the element molybdenumanother transition metalbreaks down, it turns into an isotope of technetium that lasts for about 6 hours. The technetium isotope latches on to certain kinds of heart muscle and can be seen in the muscle with special machines, similar to an X-ray.
transition Metals 5
Doctors sometimes inject the technetium isotope to help them see exactly where a heart has been damaged after a heart attack. Technetium and other transition metals can be lifesavers, but other metals in this part of the periodic table can threaten human health. Mercury, cadmium, and nickel are some of the transition metals that can cause problems ranging from skin allergies to toxic poisoning. Some people have also been concerned about the health risks of a mercury-containing compound in vaccines, the injections given to prevent diseases such as the flu. However, there is no evidence that this compound is unsafe, according to most medical experts.
summary
The transition metals are the elements found in Groups 3 through 12 and Periods 4 through 6 of the periodic table. Transition metals include a wide variety of metals that look and react differently depending on where they are placed within the groups. Most transition metals tend to be hard, shiny, and strong. The variety among these elements makes them important in countless products in the home, industry, and medicine.
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Lanthanides, Actinides, and Transuranium Elements
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he lower half of most modern periodic tables contains two rows that seem to float apart from the rest of the elements. These two rows are the lanthanides and actinides. By atomic number, they should fall into Periods 6 and 7 of the table. Some extra-long tables do squeeze them into these periods. But the lanthanide and actinide elements have a few special features that truly set them apart from the rest of the transition metals. The lanthanide elements begin with lanthanum (atomic num- ber 57) and go to ytterbium (atomic number 70). The actinide ele- ments begin with actinium (atomic number 89) and go to nobelium (atomic number 102). The actinides include another part of the periodic table called the transuranium elements, which begin with neptunium (atomic number 93) and end with roentgenium (atomic number 111) back up in Period 7. Neptunium and plutonium are the only
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Figure 6.1 The lanthanides begin with lanthanum (atomic number 57) and end in ytterbium (atomic number 70). The actinides begin with actinium (atomic number 89) and end with nobelium (atomic number 102).
transuranium elements found in nature. The rest have all been created in a laboratory or discovered in the wreckage of atomic bombs. Transuranium elements are so highly radioactive that most of them are short-lived, breaking down within seconds or less. The lanthanides and actinides, along with the rest of the trans- uranium elements, are all metals. Although they are listed apart
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from the transition metals, they still share some similarities with their fellow group members among those elements. For instance, lanthanum is similar to yttrium, which would be its upstairs neigh- bor in Group 3. Like the transition metals, however, the lanthanides and actinides break the rules a little when it comes to their valence elec- tron shell. Transition metals share electrons from the d orbital in their next-to-outermost shell. The valence electrons in lanthanides
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and actinides are located even closer to the nucleus, in the third- to-outermost electron shell. They travel in the f orbital of this shell. For this reason, the lanthanide and actinide rows are also called the f block of the periodic table. Adding electrons to a shell closer to the nucleus has a strange effect on the lanthanides. As the number of electrons and protons gets larger with each new lanthanide, the atoms themselves actually shrink, because the electrons are added close to the nucleus instead of filling up outer shells that would expand the atoms overall size. (Actinide atoms might shrink in the same way, but most actinides are too short-lived to have their size measured.)
not-So-rare eartHS
The lanthanide elements were once known as the rare earths. Lan- thanides, however, are not particularly rare. Holmium, one of the less common lanthanides, is still 20 times more abundant than silver on Earth. The rare earth name comes instead from how difficult it was for early chemists to separate all of the lanthanides from one another. Because these elements add electrons to an inner shell, they all show the same face to other elements. This makes them all react very similarly with other elements, and it can be tricky to tell them apart. Lanthanides such as lanthanum, europium, gadolinium, and terbium are used to give color and glow to searchlights, fluorescent light bulbs, color televisions, and computer monitors. Terbium compounds are behind the green color in television picture tubes and computer screens. Lanthanides like holmium, erbium, and neodymium are mixed into compounds to tint glass. Several lan- thanide compounds show up in fiber optic cables and special lenses. Welders wear goggles that contain erbium and praseodymium in the lenses because the elements help absorb the strong light of the welding torch. One of the more unusual uses of a lanthanide is in printing postage stamps. A compound of the lanthanide europium and oxygen printed on stamps gives off a distinctive glow that can be read by mail sorting machines.
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Figure 6.2 A cars catalytic converter treats the exhaust produced by its engine combustion, breaking down pollutants such as nitrogen oxides before they leave the car.
Several lanthanide metals can be found in certain types of mag- netic data storage disks for computers. Gadolinium, terbium, and dysprosium are among the elements often sandwiched with iron and cobalt in thin layers to make these devices. A compound of the lanthanide cerium and oxygen is used in catalytic converters, devices in cars that clean up the dirty fumes cre- ated by the engine. The walls of self-cleaning ovens also contain this compound. The cerium in the compound stores the oxygen until the oxygen is released to break down the polluting carbon and nitrogen gases pumped out of an engine or the carbon crust left by a baked casserole. A combination of several lanthanides and iron called misch metal is still used by some steel makers to clean up unwanted oxygen and sulfur that can weaken steel. Misch metal also throws a spark when it is scraped, making it useful in cigarette lighters.
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The lanthanum neodymium plays an unusual part in outsmart- ing counterfeiters. Neodymium combined with iron and boron makes a powerful magnet called a NIB magnet. NIB magnets are so strong that they can latch on to the tiny metal particles that the United States weaves into its paper money. Most counterfeiters are not able to insert these metal particles into their fake money, so a NIB magnet will not stick to the counterfeit bills. NIB magnets are also part of automatic car door locks and windows and computer hard drives. The lanthanides are no longer rare in the laboratory or in everyday life. Many chemists, however, still see them as a large col- lection of elements with few real differences between them.
eleMentS of war
Usually the discovery of a new element is announced in a scientific paper or at a scientific meeting. The actinide elements curium and americium were announced to the world in a 1945 childrens radio show called Quiz Kids. The shows guest scientist on Novem- ber 11 that year was a young scientist named Glenn Seaborg. One of the children on the show asked Seaborg if any new elements had been discovered lately. Seaborg happily shared the news that his lab had in fact created two new elements with atomic numbers 95 and 96. In fact, Seaborg and his fellow scientists had discovered curium (named after Pierre and Marie Curie) and americium in 1944, but their findings were part of the United States secret program to build an atomic bomb. When World War II ended in 1945 with two atomic bombs dropped on Japan, a handful of strange new ele- ments were introduced to the world. Natural actinides such as actinide, thorium, and especially uranium were already well known to chemists. Like other heavy elements, the actinides are very radioactive. Actinium itself is so radioactive that it glows in the dark. As Seaborg and others found
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Figure 6.3 The elements curium and americium were introduced by way of a popular 1940s radio show called Quiz Kids. The scientist Glenn Seaborg (left) appeared on the November 11, 1945, episode.
out, the particles released by unstable, radioactive actinides such as uranium can be turned into a deadly weapon. In an atomic bomb, a single neutron can splinter a uranium atom and scatter its neutrons, which then fly away to split apart other atoms. This atomic splitting, or fission, releases a huge amount of energyso much energy that an atomic bomb explosion can be as powerful as the blast of 500,000 tons of TNT. The World War II scientists found out that new elements could also be created in these powerful explosions. Neptunium, plutonium, americium, and curium were discovered in the early atomic bomb experiments. Other actinides such as fermium and
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Figure 6.4 This immense explosion is an example of a fusion bomb, one in which small atoms combine to create a larger atom. The effect of fusion can be much stronger than splitting atoms, or fission.
einsteinium were discovered in the exploded material of the first fusion bomb. In a fusion bomb, smaller atoms collide to create a bigger atom in a huge burst of energy that can be thousands of times stronger than a fission explosion. Some of the elements of war have found a place in peacetime. The same kind of reaction in uranium that makes an atomic bomb explode can be controlled to make electricity in a nuclear power plant. The Cassini spacecraft now orbiting the planet Saturn runs on plutonium fuel. Plutonium-based fuel was also used to power devices that the Apollo 14 astronauts left on the Moon, such as a seismometer left to detect movements of the Moons crust. The Voyager spacecraft also sent its golden record out to the stars with
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the help of plutonium fuel. In both cases, the heat created by pluto- niums radioactive decay was turned into electrical power. Americium is a critical ingredient in smoke detectors. Some of the tiny particles released by an americium compound create a small electric charge inside smoke detectors. Smoke or soot can block the charge, which sets off the alarm. One gram of americium is enough for 5,000 smoke detectors. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the actinide thorium played a part in lighting cities all across Europe and the United States. Woven cotton bags coated with thorium compounds burn with a bright light at high temperatures without melting, so they were used in gas-lit street lamps. Once scientists recognized the possible danger in using this radioactive metal (and electric lights became more popular), thorium street lamps disappeared. Today, some gas camping lanterns still contain tho- rium wicks, although most lantern manufacturers have switched over to yttrium or cerium compounds instead to produce the same glow.
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as lead and a medium-weight element such as chromium. Protons from both elements collect in one superheavy atom as a result of the smashup.
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The superheavy elements usually last for seconds or less because their nucleus is unstable, as is the nucleus of most heavy and radio- active elements. Nevertheless, chemists think there may be a way for the nucleus of a superheavy element to become more stable. Inside the nucleus, protons and neutrons move in orbits or energy shells that are similar to the electron shells outside the nucleus. If these shells are filled with certain numbers of protons and neutrons, the nucleus becomes more stable than if the protons and neutrons just move around freely in the nucleus. Scientists who have studied these magic numbers say that elements 112 to 118 might have the right number of protons and neutrons to survive for longer periods of time without breaking down. This group of yet-to- be discovered elements is sometimes called the island of stability. Could there be an end to the periodic table? Researchers think there probably is a limit to how big an atom can get before its elec- tron orbits become unstable. Most scientists think the largest pos- sible atomic number is between 170 and 210, although the nucleus itself may break down at atomic numbers much smaller than 170.
SuMMary
The lanthanide and actinide elements are located at the bottom of the periodic table in two rows separate from the rest of the elements. By atomic number, they should be located in Periods 6 and 7, but they have special properties that distinguish them from elements in those periods. Lanthanides are very similar to each other and have some industrial uses. Many of the actinides were discovered as part of the first atomic bomb experiments. They are highly radioactive and have few uses. The transuranium elements were mostly created in the laboratory and are very short-lived.
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poor Metals, Metalloids, and Nonmetals: The bcNos
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he elements in Groups 13 through 16 of the periodic table are a mixed bag. Some of the elements are metals, though they barely act like metals in chemical reactions and are often called poor metals. Other elements within these groups are definitely nonmetals, whereas still other elementsmetalloidshave a com- bination of metal and nonmetal features. Metals, metalloids, and nonmetals are sometimes even found in the same group. Scientists find it difficult to agree on one name for all these groups, so many researchers just call them the BCNOs, after the first element in each group (Boron, Carbon, Nitrogen, and Oxygen). The BCNOs contain elements that are very important to life on Earth, such as oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen. They also include met- als that were useful to early civilizations and metalloids that make up the computer chips and high-tech devices of today.
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As might be expected from their position in the periodic table, elements in the four groups are in a transition zone between true metals and stable gases. To the left of the BCNOs in the table, the true metals tend to give up electrons in their mostly empty valence shells to other atoms. To the right of the BCNOs in the table, gases with mostly full valence shells seize or share electrons with other atoms. BCNOs, depending on whether they act more like a metal
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or nonmetal, may be involved in both kinds of electron activity, since they have valence shells that are about half full. The poor metals among the BCNOs usually include aluminum, gallium, indium, thallium, tin, lead, and bismuth. The metalloids are boron, silicon, germanium, arsenic, antimony, tellurium, and polonium. The nonmetals are carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, phospho- rus, sulfur and selenium. These groups are not official, and chem- ists sometimes disagree on whether a particular element like boron should be called a metal or a metalloid. The BCNOs, along with the halogens of Group 17 and the noble gases of Group 18, are part of the periodic tables p block. The p block is named after the fact that electrons involved in chemical reactions in these elements come from the p orbital. It may not seem like a gas such as nitrogen has anything in common with a heavy metal such as lead. But the BCNOs share an important feature: their ability to make many different chemical partnerships. The in-between behavior of BCNO elements whether it acts like a metal, a nonmetal, or a little of bothmakes it easy for them to team up with a wide variety of elements.
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carbon from archaeological sites. The half-life of carbon-14 is about 5,730 years. One of the most famous recent cases of carbon- 14 dating is the Iceman, the mummified body of a man found frozen high in the mountains between Italy and Austria. Carbon- 14 dating of the body and of his well preserved clothing, tools, and
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even the remains of his last meal inside his body show that he lived almost 5,500 years ago. Phosphorus combined with oxygen makes up much of our bones and teeth. Phosphorus is also found in the molecule ATP, which delivers chemical energy inside cells. These two roles for phosphorus, especially the part it plays in creating ATP, make the element essential for human life. But some compounds of oxygen and phosphorus called organophosphates can be deadly. Organophosphates are the key ingredient in powerful insect killers such as diazinon and malathion, and can cause serious nerve dam- age in humans. Organophosphates are also found in deadly nerve gases such as sarin, which killed 12 people in a terrorist attack on a subway in Japan in 1995 and as many as 5,000 people in the 1988 Halabja poison gas attack by the Iraqi government. Nitrogen gas, which makes up 78% of the Earths air, is another BCNO element that is necessary for life but also has a destructive side. Nitrogen combines with oxygen to deliver chemical messages inside cells. Nitrogen also joins carbon as an important part of DNA molecules. The element, however, is also an important part of photochemical smog, a type of air pollution created when sun- light reacts with several compounds, including nitrogen dioxide. Gunpowder, nitroglycerine (the main ingredient in dynamite), and the explosive TNT all contain nitrogen compounds that turn into violently expanding nitrogen gas when they are heated. (The Nobel Prizes, the worlds most famous awards in science and writing, were named after Alfred Nobel, the Swedish inventor of dynamite.) Nitrogen gas is also behind the tiny but lifesaving explosion that inflates a cars air bag in a crash. The BCNO elements also play an important part in how the Earth itself looks today. For instance, the oxygen gas ozone is part of a layer in the atmosphere that protects the planet from the Suns damaging radiation. Plants constantly change carbon dioxide gas into the oxygen and food that keeps animals alive. Gasoline, oil,
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and coal are all hydrocarbons, the carbon compounds that humans depend on to fuel our cars and our homes. Bacteria and algae turn nitrogen into compounds such as ammonia fertilizer and other sources of energy for all living things.
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Figure 7.2 Sulfur is probably most famous for its foul stench. It distinguishes the odor of a skunks scent and is used to create a multitude of everyday items, such as paper and detergent.
many other metals and is used in everything from soda cans to special metal foam used to soundproof rooms. Aluminum is also so highly reflective that it is used in solar mirrors that generate solar power and heat-reflecting blankets used in to keep people warm in medical emergencies or during surgery. Aluminum is also a popular metal because it costs less to recycle aluminum than to extract it from new ore. Among the more unusual BCNO compounds is antimony oxide, which is used to fireproof toys, car seats, and airplane parts. The compound reacts with burning material to form a chemical layer that blankets and extinguishes the flame. In ancient times, the Egyptians mixed a compound of antimony and sulfur with fat to make kohl, a black cosmetic used to color eyebrows and line eyes with a dark ring. All living things seem to need a tiny bit of the
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BCNO selenium in their cells, but the element is also very useful in machines such as photocopiers and light meters. Selenium metal conducts electricity much better when exposed to light, which
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makes it ideal for these electronic devices. The BCNO semiconduc- tor silicon, best known for its role in computers and electronics, shines in a different light in gemstones like opal and agate. Lead is one BCNO that is less popular now than in the past. For centuries, lead compounds were used in water pipes and more
Figure 7.3 The scientists who discovered the buckyball, also known as buckminsterfullerene, were awarded the 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. The molecules alternate name is an homage to Buckminster Fuller, an esteemed architect who invented the geodesic dome.
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recently used in paint and gasoline. Unfortunately, lead poisoning keeps the body from making new red blood cells and can eventu- ally cause death if enough lead is absorbed by the body. The ele- ment is still found in a few products like batteries and the glass on computer and television screens, where its many electrons block the radiation coming out of these machines. Lead is not the only silent killer among the BCNO elements. Arsenic, antimony, and thallium compounds have all been used as weed and insect killers and rat poisons. These elements can also poison the soil and water, so they are used more carefully and in smaller amounts than they were in the past century. All of these elements have also been used as slow murder weapons. They cause such ordinary problemssuch as an upset stomachthat it can be
Sugar of lead
Up until the twentieth century, a white powdery chemical called lead acetate was a secret ingredient used to sweeten wine and preserve fruit. The Romans made a lead acetate syrup by boil- ing wine in lead pots. They then used it in other drinks and foods. The sweet wine may have been one reason that wealthy Romans often had gout, a painful disease of the joints that can be caused by high levels of lead in the blood. The practice of sweetening wine and other alcoholic drinks with lead acetate continued for centuries, even as people began to recognize that lead could be a poisonous element. Some researchers think that leaded wine may be behind the deaths of some famous people, including the composer Ludwig van Beethoven. Today, one of the main causes of lead poisoning comes from old paint chips, which small children may eat for their sweet taste.
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hard to figure out if a person has been poisoned or died of a natural disease.
SuMMary
The BCNO elements are found in Groups 13 through 16 of the periodic table. The BCNO groups are a mixture of poor metals,
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Figure 7.4 A scientist holds a very small silicon chip. Silicon, a semiconductor, has proven instrumental in numerous technological advances.
metalloids, and nonmetals. They include many of the elements essential for life on Earth, such as oxygen and carbon. They also include some important industrial metals such as aluminum and semiconductors such as silicon that are essential to computers and other high-tech machines.
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Figure 8.1 Group 17 (the halogens) and Group 18 (the noble gases) of the periodic table are displayed here.
a natural partner in the alkali metals because the alkali metals do best in chemical reactions where they can give away the lone electron in their outermost shell. The word halogen means salt maker, since alkali metals and halogens combine to create several different salts. Mendeleyev did not know about the noble gases when he wrote down his first periodic table. The noble gases were hidden from
the experiments of chemists because they did not react with any other elements. In the late nineteenth century, chemists in England discovered most of the noble gases by figuring out a way to sepa- rate them from air. As their location in the periodic table shows, the noble gases have a full valence electron shell. With no need to gain or lose electrons, the gases rarely interact with other ele- ments. Helium and neon have never been found in any compound. Chemists can make argon, krypton, and xenon react with other elements under special conditions in the laboratory. The halogens and noble gases, along with the BCNOs in Groups 13 through 16 are part of the periodic tables p block. The p block is named after the fact that the valence electrons in these elements come from the p orbital.
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Figure 8.2 The person in this photograph suffers from a swelling of the thyroid gland. Iodine is responsible for regulating the health of this gland.
medicines, and sometimes bleach paper. Polyvinyl chloride or PVC plastic is found in everything from pipes to lawn chairs to floors. Chlorine gas was first used as a weapon in World War I by the Germans on Allied troops at the Second Battle of Ypres. The heavy, greenish yellow gas settled into the soldiers trenches and caused thousands of them to stop breathing and die. Astatine, the heaviest halogen, is so highly radioactive that less than a gram of it has ever existed on Earth. Bromine and iodine are slightly less reactive than fluorine and chlorine and have fewer uses. Camera film uses a light-sensitive compound of bromine and silver, and bromine produces a rich purple dye. Before lead was recognized as a toxic pollutant and removed from gasoline, bro- mine was added to gas as a way to prevent engine knocking, the
shuddering caused by gas burning unevenly in the engine. The manufacturers of citrus-flavored sodas and drinks add a mix of vegetable oil and bromine to their products to keep the citrus fla- vors mixed throughout the liquid. Iodine is a germ-killer like chlorine and is also necessary for the health of the thyroid gland in humans. In fact, people who live close to nuclear power plants are often given emergency supplies of potassium iodine pills, in case the power plant has a leak of radioactive iodine. The pills flood the thyroid with normal iodine to keep the gland from absorbing the more harmful radioactive version of the element. Some halogen compounds have been too reactive for the health of people and the planet. They can destroy healthy cells and attack the Earths atmosphere in the same active way that they kill germs or break down wood into paper. For instance, chloro- fluorocarbon (or CFC) compounds used to be popular cooling chemicals in refrigerators and air conditioners and in the gas that pushed hairspray and deodorant out of aerosol cans. CFCs are now widely banned because they destroy Earths atmosphere. Chlorine is also part of the insect killer DDT, a dry cleaning fluid, and the compounds called PCBs. All of these products are now banned or used rarely because they have been linked to pollution and health problems like cancer and liver disease.
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energy shells into shells that are at a higher energy level. The elec- trons fall back into their normal shells to keep the atom stable by releasing the electric energy as a particle of light. These particles give neon and other noble gases their special glow. Lights are what noble gases do best. Along with the colored lights they produce, noble gases also fill regular light bulbs. The tungsten filament inside light bulbs breaks down when it is ex- posed to the oxygen in normal air. As a solution, light bulb makers sometimes surround the delicate wire with a noble gas like argon,
ozone eaterS
About 12 to 15 miles (about 20 to 25 km) above the Earths surface, a thin blanket of gas protects us from the Suns harm- ful rays. The blanket is ozone, triplets of oxygen atoms bound together in molecules that absorb the Suns ultraviolet radia- tion. In the 1970s, scientists discovered that the ozone layer was under attack from CFCs. CFCs released from a can of hairspray do not just disap- pear, the researchers found. They float up high into the ozone layer, where they are broken apart by ultraviolet radiation. The wreckage of a CFC molecule contains highly active chlorine atoms that can destroy ozone. In the 1980s, scientists studying the atmosphere over Antarctica shocked the world by announcing they had found a hole in the ozone layer over that continent. The startling discovery led to an international treaty called the Montreal Protocol that banned the use of CFCs in most products. Nearly all of the worlds countries have signed the treaty, leading to a sharp decrease in the amount of ozone-eating CFCs in the atmosphere.
which does not react at all with the tungsten. Krypton and xenon are used in camera flashes and the lights that line airport runways. The intense but short-lived flashes of white light produced by xenon flash lamps are also used as strobe lights, like those found in dance clubs. The light of helium-neon lasers is used in the checkout scanners at grocery stores. Most of the other uses for noble gases take advantage of their stable and nonreactive form. Silicon chips for computers are some- times manufactured in a helium atmosphere because they can be
Figure 8.3 This is an October 1, 1998, NASA satellite image of the ozone hole over the South Pole. The hole was alarmingly large, most likely due to an overabundance of CFCs in the atmosphere that break apart the oxygen molecules of the ozone layer.
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assembled cleanly without interacting with destructive oxygen molecules in the air. Argon also offers a nonreactive environment for making steel, and it is pumped into the top of wine barrels to keep the oxygen in air from reacting with the wine. For similar reasons, museum exhibits such as paintings and old documents like the Declaration of Independence are sometimes encased in protective argon-filled containers. After the fiery 1937 crash of the Hindenburg, which was filled with highly reactive hydrogen gas, balloons and blimps are filled instead with lightweight and nonre- active helium. Helium, the lightest noble gas and probably the second element ever formed in the universe, has several other interesting uses. The element freezes at very low temperatures, close to 430F (about 257C), which makes it very useful for cooling other materials. For instance, liquid helium is used to cool the very strong magnets used in magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI. (Doctors use MRI machines to see bones and soft tissues inside the body in more detail than can be seen with a simple X-ray.) Helium is also mixed with oxygen in the air tanks of deep-sea divers. Deep below the oceans surface, the oxygen and nitrogen in air become more easily dissolved into the bloodstream. The extra nitrogen in the blood can make divers feel disoriented and sometimes cause the bends, a painful condition where nitrogen bubbles form in the blood. Too much dis- solved oxygen in the blood can eventually poison the brain. Divers have less chance of these life-threatening problems when they carry a mix of oxygen and helium, which is much harder to dissolve in the bloodstream. Like the heavy elements of other groups, the noble gases have their own very radioactive member in radon. Radon can break down into dangerous isotopes that find their way into the lungs and cause cancer. In fact, radon is the second largest cause of lung cancer in the United States after cigarette smoke. In the 1980s, scientists discovered that dangerous radon could build up in base- ments and ground-floor rooms in houses that did not have enough
windows or other places for the gas to escape. Radon also collects in underground mines.
SuMMary
The halogens are found in Group 17 of the periodic table. The noble gases are found in Group 18. The halogens are highly reactive, most often forming compounds with alkali metals in Group 1. The noble gases are mostly nonreactive. The halogens have some important industrial roles but have also proved poisonous to humans and the environment in several cases. The noble gases are known for their distinctive colors when charged with electricity.
87
But is the long history of the periodic table of elements finally over? After all, the boxes have been filled, and the pattern that con- nects them into periods and groups is well known. Are scientists and inventors, doctors and artists still interested in the periodic table and the things it can tell us? The answer is a definite yes. Ever since Mendeleyev trans- formed a simple list of elements into a useful scientific tool, the periodic table has been the doorway through which researchers of all kinds can explore the universe of matter. Old elements are put to new uses, like the zinc nanoparticles in sunscreen. Familiar reac- tions are found to create serious problems, such as the destruction of the ozone layer by chlorofluorocarbons. Like Mendeleyev him- self, scientists are predicting the existence of brand-new elements that have never been seen but are certain to be built someday in the laboratory. The future of chemistry still lies within the rows and columns of the periodic table, as some cutting-edge research proves. The future of life also lies within the periodic table as people are con- stantly looking for ways to improve the quality of life through medicines, alternative fuels, and high-tech gadgets.
88
oxygen-filled atmosphere, it might look and act like sulfur-loving bacteria, researchers suggest.
medical metalS
Todays medical researchers are finding out that ancient alchemists may have been on to something when they mixed up different met- als to cure certain illnesses. Scientists have known for a long time that metals like copper and zinc are important to human health. But studies now show that tiny amounts of many other metals are necessary for cells in the body to do their workmetals such as selenium, arsenic, and molybdenum that can be toxic at high doses. Scientists now combine what they know about the biology of cells with information about the atomic structure and reactions of metal elements to invent new drugs. For instance, vanadium is now used in medicines to treat diabetes. Patients with kidney failure take lanthanum carbonatea compound of lanthanum, carbon, and oxygento fight dangerously high levels of phosphate in the blood.
89
Small amounts of gadolinium and indium make MRI pictures of the body clearer and easier for doctors to read.
memory in a flaSh
Cell phones, digital cameras, MP3 players, and memory sticks for computers all depend on a device called flash memory. Flash memory is a way to store information in all kinds of electronic gadgets even when they are unplugged or not receiving power from another source like a battery. In a little over a decade, flash memory has become such a large part of modern electronics that researchers are already looking for ways to improve it. Flash memory devices are built out of silicon, but many scientists are now turning to other BCNO elements to make memory devices that work faster and hold more information. For instance, some researchers have built a new kind of flash memory out of carbon nanotubeslong, wirelike versions of the buckyball. A nanotube memory device would be hundreds of times smaller than todays flash devices. Three technology companies announced recently that they had developed a new alloy of germanium and antimony that could be used to make a memory device that works at least 500 times faster than flash memory. Another team of scientists is hoping to build a faster-than-flash memory device with an unusual ingredient chunks of a living virus that normally infects tobacco plants. When these virus chunks are coated with nanoparticles of platinum, they can be used as tiny electrical switches that move from off to on in microseconds.
90
track and protect these species. They have discovered that the hair, feathers, bone, and horns of animals like the rhino contain unique sets of isotopes. These isotopes find their way into animals mostly through the food they eat, adding up to a sort of chemical finger- print that can tell a researcher exactly where an animal lived. For instance, scientists recently showed that rhinos living at a certain animal reserve in South Africa with strontium-rich volcanic rocks have a special strontium isotope in their horns. Endangered species detectives could use this strontium fingerprint in rhino horns that are sold around the world to figure out if the rhinos on the preserve are being hunted illegally for their horn. Other isotopes of hydro- gen, carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur are used to track disappearing species from elephants to butterflies.
SuMMary
These reports from the edge of elements research show that the story of the universes building blocks is far from finished. More than 130 years after Mendeleyev discovered the pattern of the periodic table, people are still searching through the table to find new things to build, new problems to solve, and new ways to look at the world.
92
electron configurations
[Rn] 7s25f146d1
94
ELEMENT
SyMboL
aToMic NuMbEr
aToMic MaSS
Actinium Aluminum Americium Antimony Argon Arsenic Astatine Barium Berkelium Beryllium Bismuth Bohrium Boron Bromine Cadmium Calcium Californium Carbon Cerium Cesium Chlorine Chromium Cobalt Copper Curium Darmstadtium Dubnium Dysprosium Einsteinium Erbium Europium Fermium Fluorine
Ac Al Am Sb Ar As At Ba Bk Be Bi Bh B Br Cd Ca Cf C Ce Cs Cl Cr Co Cu Cm Ds Db Dy Es Er Eu Fm F
(227) 26.9815 243 121.76 39.948 74.9216 (210) 137.328 (247) 9.0122 208.9804 (262) 10.81 79.904 112.412 40.078 (251) 12.011 140.115 132.9054 35.4528 51.9962 58.9332 63.546 (247) (271) (262) 162.5 (252) 167.26 151.966 (257) 18.9984
Fr Gd Ga Ge Au Hf Hs He Ho H In I Ir Fe Kr La Lr Pb Li Lu Mg Mn Mt Md Hg Mo Nd Ne Np Ni Nb N No
(223) 157.25 69.723 72.61 196.9655 178.49 (263) 4.0026 164.9303 1.00794 114.818 126.9045 192.217 55.845 83.798 138.9055 (260) 207.2 6.941 174.967 24.3051 54.938 (268) (258) 200.59 95.94 144.24 20.1798 (237) 58.6934 92.9064 14.0067 (259)
Gold Hafnium Hassium Helium Holmium Hydrogen Indium Iodine Iridium Iron Krypton Lanthanum Lawrencium Lead Lithium Lutetium Magnesium Manganese Meitnerium Mendelevium Mercury Molybdenum Neodymium Neon Neptunium Nickel Niobium Nitrogen Nobelium
96
ELEMENT
SyMboL
aToMic NuMbEr
aToMic MaSS
ELEMENT
SyMboL
aToMic NuMbEr
aToMic MaSS
Osmium Oxygen Palladium Phosphorus Platinum Plutonium Polonium Potassium Promethium Protactinium Radium Radon Rhenium Rhodium Roentgenium Rubidium Ruthenium Rutherfordium Samarium Scandium Seaborgium Selenium
Os O Pd P Pt Pu Po K Pm Pa Ra Rn Re Rh Rg Rb Ru Rf Sm Sc Sg Se
190.23 15.9994 106.42 30.9738 195.08 (244) (209) 39.0938 140.908 (145) 231.036 (226) (222) 186.207 102.9055 (272) 85.4678 101.07 (261) 150.36 44.9559 (266) 78.96
Silicon Silver Sodium Strontium Sulfur Tantalum Technetium Tellurium Terbium Thallium Thorium Thulium Tin Titanium Tungsten Ununbium Uranium Vanadium Xenon Ytterbium Yttrium Zinc Zirconium
Si Ag Na Sr S Ta Tc Te Tb Tl Th Tm Sn Ti W Uub U V Xe Yb Y Zn Zr
14 47 11 38 16 73 43 52 65 81 90 69 50 22 74 112 92 23 54 70 39 30 40
28.0855 107.8682 22.9898 87.62 32.067 180.948 (98) 127.6 158.9253 204.3833 232.0381 168.9342 118.711 47.867 183.84 (277) 238.0289 50.9415 131.29 173.04 88.906 65.409 91.224
Praseodymium Pr
actinides The elements from actinium (atomic number 89) to nobelium (atomic number 102). alchemy A mixture of chemistry and philosophy practiced in the ancient world; its main goals were to transform metals into gold and find chemical potions that would cure disease and lengthen life. alkalimetals The elements found in Group 1 of the periodic table. alkalineearthmetals The elements found in Group 2 of the periodic table. alloy A mixture of two or more metals or metals and nonmet- als. An alloy has different properties than the metals or non- metals by themselves. amalgam An alloy of mercury with another metal or metals. atom The smallest part of an element that still has all the prop- erties of that element. An atom contains electrons and a nucleus of protons and neutrons. atomicnumber The number of protons in an atoms nucleus. atomicweight The weight of all the protons and neutrons found in the nucleus of an atom. The atomic mass written in an ele- ments square on the periodic table is the average mass of all of an elements isotopes found in nature. bcNo The name given to the elements of Groups 13 through 16 of the periodic table. The names are from the first letters of the first elements in these groups: boron, carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen. bose-Einsteincondensate A state of matter, different from a solid, liquid or gas, formed when individual atoms cooled to temperatures close to absolute zero behave as a single large superatom. buckyball A very stable molecule of 60 carbon atoms arranged in a soccer-ball shape; often used in nanotechnol-
98
Glossary 99
ogy applications. The formal name for these molecules is buckminsterfullerene. Capacitor A device consisting of two conducting objects placed near each other that stores an electrical charge. Carbohydrate An organic compound such as a sugar or starch made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen that is a major energy source for animals. Catalyst Any matter that is used to change or speed up a chemi- cal reaction without being changed itself or destroyed in the reaction. Compound Matter made of two or more elements joined together chemically. The resulting compound has different chemical properties than the elements themselves. Conductor An element or compound through which electricity or heat can flow freely. Corrosion The breakdown of a material, especially a metal, by chemical reaction. Rust, caused by a reaction of iron, water, and oxygen, is a common type of corrosion. dblock The section of the periodic table that includes the transi- tion metal elements in Groups 3 through 12. The block is named after the d orbital that contains the elements valence electrons. Desiccant A chemical that attracts water molecules and is used to dry out other materials. DNA A very long, large molecule that carries genetic information in all living things; it is the abbreviation for deoxyribonucleic acid. Electron A tiny particle with a negative electrical charge that moves around the nucleus of an atom. Electronshell A space surrounding the nucleus of an atom where electrons travel; sometimes called an orbital or energy level. Element An atom of matter with a specific number of protons in its nucleus; the smallest building block of matter that cannot be broken down into two or more different kinds of matter.
100
Glossary
Erosion The process of wearing away soil, sand, or rock by the action of water, wind, or ice. Extremophile An animal, usually a single-celled bacterium, that lives in extreme conditions, such as very high or low temperatures, high or low air pressure, or high level of sur- rounding chemicals. fblock The section of the periodic table that includes the lan- thanides and actinides. The block is named after the f orbital that contains the elements valence electrons. Fission The process of splitting the nucleus of an atom into the nuclei of several lighter atoms, releasing a large amount of energy. Fuelcell A device that creates energy, usually electricity, by combining a fuel such as liquid hydrogen with oxygen. Fusion The process where nuclei of lighter atoms join together to create the nucleus of a heavier atom, releasing a large amount of energy. Gas A form of matter where particles move freely and can expand to fit any size and shape of its container. Group One of the 18 vertical columns in the periodic table. Elements in the same group usually, but not always, have similar properties. Half-life The time it takes for half of the atoms in a sample of radioactive material to break down, or decay. Halogens The elements found in Group 17 of the periodic table. Hydrocarbon Any kind of compound containing only hydrogen and carbon; the best-known hydrocarbons are fuels such as oil and gas. Hypothesis A temporary explanation for a scientific problem or observation that can be tested by further research. insulator An element or compound through which electricity and heat do not flow freely.
Glossary 101
ion An atom or group of atoms with extra or missing elec- trons. Extra electrons give the atoms a negative electrical charge, whereas missing electrons give the atoms a positive electrical charge. iridescence A display of softly bright rainbow colors that may shift over time or depending on viewing light or viewing angle. islandofstability The name given to a possible group of trans- fermian elements where the number of protons and neutrons in the elements nuclei are such that the nuclei are much more stable than other known transfermian elements. isotopes Atoms of the same element that have different atomic weights due to different numbers of neutrons in the nucleus. Lanthanides The elements from lanthanum (atomic number 57) to lutetium (atomic number 70). Liquid A form of matter where particles move less freely than in a gas but more freely than in a solid; liquids can change their shape to fit any container but cannot expand to fill a container. Mass A measurement of an amount of matter. A measurement of mass is the same everywhere in the universe, where a mea- surement of weight is dependent on the pull of gravity. Matter Anything that has mass and takes up space, regardless of where in the universe it is located. Metal An element that easily conducts heat and electricity, has high boiling and melting temperatures, and tends to give up electrons in chemical reactions. Metalloid An element that has properties of both metals and nonmetals; sometimes called a semiconductor. Mischmetal A manufactured mix of lanthanide elements and iron that easily produces sparks when struck or rubbed. Molecule A group of atoms joined by chemical bonds. Nanoparticle A particle of a single element or compound whose size is measured in nanometers, or one-billionth of a meter.
102
Glossary
Neutron A particle of matter with no electrical charge that binds to protons to make the nucleus of an atom. Noblegases The elements found in Group 18 of the periodic table. Nonmetal An element that does not easily conduct heat and electricity and tends to gain or share electrons in chemical reactions. Nucleus The center of an atom, made of protons and neutrons, which makes up most of an atoms mass. orbital A path or energy level followed by an electron inside an electron shell. ore A rock or mineral that contains metal that can be sold or traded. organic Describes a chemical compound containing car- bon; usually used to describe living things such as plants and animals. ozone An unstable oxygen molecule consisting of three oxygen atoms; ozone collected in the Earths atmosphere shields the planet from the Suns ultraviolet light. pblock The section of the periodic table that includes the halo- gens and noble gases. The block is named after the p orbital that contains the elements valence electrons. Period One of the seven horizontal rows in the periodic table. Periods track the addition of electrons to shells outside the nucleus of an atom. Periodic Happening or repeating after a specific amount of time or a specific amount of space. Periodictableoftheelements An arrangement of all the ele- ments by increasing atomic number in periods and groups that demonstrates their repeating nature. Polarize To alter the vibration of a light wave so that the direc- tion of the wave changes from its original direction.
Glossary 103
Poormetals The metal-like elements of the BCNO groups; poor metals act like metals but are less reactive than the alkali and alka- line earth metals but more reactive than the transition metals. Proton A particle of matter with a positive electrical charge that binds to neutrons to make the nucleus of an atom. Pyrotechnician A specially trained expert who designs, manu- factures, and explodes fireworks and flares. radioactivity The energy released as the result of the break- down or decay of the nucleus of an atom. reaction A process of chemical change involving two or more elements or compounds; reactions can combine, exchange pieces between or break down the involved elements or compounds. refine To bring to a pure state; to remove impure or additional materials. reflective Bending or pushing back light from a surface. sblock The section of the periodic table that includes the alkali and alkaline earth metals. The block is named after the s orbital that contains the elements valence electrons. Semiconductor An element or compound that can conduct electricity better than an insulator (nonmetal) but not as well as a conductor (metal); the electrical flow in a semiconductor can be changed with a change in temperature or by adding other materials. Smog Air pollution caused by the reaction of sunlight and chem- ical compounds such as nitrogen dioxide and hydrocarbons; the compounds are usually produced by car exhaust and the release of gases from industries such as coal-fired power plants. Solder A metal alloy that can be melted to join together other metal pieces without melting the entire metal structure. Solid A form of matter where particles are held firmly in posi- tion. A solid has a definite mass and cannot change its shape to fit a container without breaking that shape.
104
Glossary
Steel A metal alloy that contains iron as its main ingredient along with some carbon and is hard, durable, and able to be shaped into different forms. Steel may contain a number of other elements including nickel, cobalt, manganese, and several other metals. Superconductor A material through which electricity flows freely, without any lost power. Superheavyelements See Transfermian elements. Transfermianelements The elements with atomic numbers higher than 100, the atomic number of fermium; sometimes called superheavy elements. Transitionmetals The elements of Groups 3 through 12 and Periods 4 through 7, excluding the lanthanides and actinides. Transuraniumelements The elements with atomic numbers higher than 92, the atomic number of uranium. Valenceelectron An electron involved in a reaction between two or more elements. Valence electrons are usually, but not always, found in the outermost electron shell from an atoms nucleus. Valenceshell The electron shell in which valence electrons are located. Vapor The gas form of a material normally found as a liquid or solid. Vulcanization A process where sulfur is added to natural rubber to make the rubber harder and more durable.
Abbgy, Theodore S. Elements and the Periodic Table: What Things Are Made Of. Quincy, IL: Mark Twain Media, 2001. Amin, Rajan, Max Bramer, and Richard Emslie. Intelligent Data Analysis for Conservation: Experiments With Rhino Horn Fin- gerprint Identification. Knowledge-Based Systems 16 (2003): 329336. Atkins, P.W. The Periodic Kingdom. New York: BasicBooks, 1995. Ball, Philip. The Ingredients: A Guided Tour of the Elements. Oxford, UK: University Press, 2002. Boyce, Nell. Safety of Nano-Cosmetics Questioned. Morning Edition, National Public Radio Web site. Available online. URL: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5257306. Brown, Alan S. Maglev Goes To Work. Mechanical Engineering Web site. Available online. URL: http://www.memagazine.org/ june06/features/maglev/maglev.html. Chang, Hao. Chinese Terms for Chemical Elements: Characters Combining Radical and Phonetic Elements. Chemistry Interna- tional, January-February 2004. Emsley, John. Natures Building Blocks. Oxford, UK: Oxford Uni- versity Press, 2001. Engber, Daniel. Stay Out of That Balloon!: The Dangers of Helium Inhalation. Slate Web site. Available online. URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2143631. Essick, Kristi. Guns, Money and Cell Phones. Industry Standard, June 11, 2001. Gordin, Michael D. A Well-Ordered Thing: Dmitrii Mendeleev and the Shadow of the Periodic Table. New York: BasicBooks, 2004. Hofmann, Sigurd. On Beyond Uranium: Journey to the End of the Periodic Table. London: Taylor and Francis, 2002. IBM. Promising New Memory Chip Technology Demonstrated by IBM, Macronix and Qimonda Joint Research Team. IBM
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WebSites
chemicalachievers:ThePathtothePeriodicTable http://www.chemheritage.org/classroom/chemach/periodic/index. html This site contains a short history of the scientists who made the discoveries leading up to Mendeleyevs modern periodic table.
108
FurtherReading 109
ChemiCool:PeriodicTable http://www.chemicool.com The ChemiCool table offers information about each element along with an easy-to-read chemistry dictionary. ItsElemental:ThePeriodicTable http://pubs.acs.org/cen/80th/elements.html The magazine Chemical and Engineering News celebrated its eightieth birthday with these short essays and photos of each element in the periodic table. TheOriginofthePeriodicTable http://www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/periodic_table/index.html Part of the University of Colorados Physics 2000 project, this site explains the periodic table in a conversation between cartoon student Alex Morales and know-it-all scientist Dr. Bob. PeriodicTable:Formulations http://www.meta-synthesis.com/webbook/35_pt/pt.html This site contains a wide selection of periodic tables throughout history, along with short explanations about their creators. ThePeriodicTableofComicBooks http://www.uky.edu/Projects/Chemcomics/ Each element in this unique periodic table is linked to comic books that mention the element. Click on Co, for instance, and see the comic where the X-Men fought Cobalt Man. TheVisualElementsPeriodicTable http://www.chemsoc.org/viselements/Pages/periodic_table.html The Visual Elements table has a unique photograph, short Web videos, and descriptions for each element. WebElementsPeriodicTable http://www.webelements.com This site is a good place to start looking at the periodic table and learning a little more about each element.
acqua vitae, 6 actinides atomic bombs and, 5961 peacetime uses of, 6162 position in periodic table, 4344, 54 properties of, 5557 airtanks, deep-sea diving, 84 alchemy, 67, 16 alkali metals compounds of, 3337 position in periodic table, 30 properties of, 3133 radioactive isotopes, 4142 alkaline earth metals compounds of, 3337 position in periodic table, 30 properties of, 3133 radioactive isotopes, 3941 alloys, 3537, 46, 7071 aluminum, 7071 amalgam, 52 americium, 59, 62 ammonia production, 39 anticancer drugs, platinum-based, 5152 archeological sites, dating of, 4142, 6769 Aristotle, 6 astatine, 80 Atkins, P.W., 23 atomic bomb, 5960 atomic clocks, 41 atomic masses, 9495 atomic number, 1920, 25 atomic weight, 9, 19, 25 atoms Boyles conception of, 7 description of, 6, 18 structure of, 1819
beryllium, 3536 bipolar disorder, 37 bombs atomic bomb, 5960 fusion bomb, 61 magnesium fires from, 34 Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC), 88 Boyle, Robert, 7 bromine, 23, 8081 buckyball, 72, 73
bacterial production of gold nuggets, 49 barium X-rays, 37 batteries, 35 BCNOs as building blocks of life, 6769 Earths environment and, 6970 groups included in, 65, 7576 industrial uses of, 7073 poisonous elements, 7375 position in periodic table, 65 properties of, 6567 semiconductors, 75 BEC (Bose-Einstein condensate), 88 Benfey table, 26
cadmium, 48, 53 calcium compounds, 33 capacitors, 47 carbohydrates, 67 carbon-14 dating, 6769 Cassini spacecraft, 72 catalysts, 46 catalytic converters, 58 cerium, 58 cesium clocks, 41 CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons), 81, 82 chemical galaxy, 28 chemical reactions, in classifying lists of elements, 9, 2225 chlorine, 7980 chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), 81, 82 chromium, 46, 48 cisplatin, 515252 clocks, atomic, 41 cobalt, 4849, 52 colors of fireworks, 35 coltan, 47 compounds of alkali metals and alkaline earth metals, 30, 3337 of BCNOs, 6774 of halogens, 7980 of lanthanides, 57, 58 of transition metals, 48, 50, 52 computer chips, 75, 8384 conductors, 29 Congo, 47 copper, 48 corrosion, 46 counterfeit money, 59 Curie, Marie and Pierre, 40, 41 curium, 59
110
Index 111
deep-sea diving airtanks, 84 Democratic Republic of the Congo, 47 Democritus, 6, 18 desiccants, 3435 dinosaur extinction, 50 DNA, 39, 67
Earths environment, BCNOs and, 6970 electron shells, 19, 2022 electrons description of, 19 periodic pattern and, 2022 element 118, 63 elements. See also periodic table of elements atomic masses of, 9495 creation of, in laboratory, 6263 defined, 2, 3, 78 early concepts of, 56 early patterns seen in, 9 modern concepts of, 79 naming of, 15 predicted by Mendeleyevs table, 1516 symbols for, 15, 25 endangered species, 8990 energy levels of electrons, 20. See also electron shells environmental pollutants, 81, 82 explosives, 69 extremophiles, 87
half-life, 52 halogens, 7778, 7981 Harris, James Andrew, 56 helium, 82, 83 history early concepts of elements, 56 modern concepts of elements, 79 overview, 8687 predictions made from periodic table, 1316 tables of elements developed, 911 human body, elements in, 68 hydrocarbons, 70 hydrogen, 30, 3739 hydrogenated oils, 38, 39 hypothesis, defined, 16
f block, 57 f orbital, 25 fertilizer production, 39 fireworks, 35 fission, 60 flash memory, 89 floodlights, 50 fluorine, 79 fluorocarbons, 79 fraud, scientific, 63 fuel cells, 39 fuel, hydrogen as, 39 fusion bomb, 61
Iceman, 68 insulators, 75 International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), 15 invisible ink, 4849 iodine, 81 ions, 19 iridium, 48, 50 iron, 46 island of stability, 64 isotope fingerprints of endangered species, 8990 isotopes, 19, 41 IUPAC (International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry), 15
gallium, 15, 16 gases, 7, 23. See also noble gases germanium, 15, 16, 75 gold, 46 gold deposits, secondary, 49 golden record, 12 groups, defined, 25
laboratory creation of new elements, 6263 lakes in periodic table, 23 lanthanides industrial uses of, 5759 position in periodic table, 4344, 54 properties of, 5557 Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent de, 78 lead acetate, 74 lead poisoning, 7374 life, elements essential for, 6770 light bulb filaments, 4950, 8283 light production, noble gases and, 8183 liquids, 23 lithium chloride, 37
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Index
matter, defined, 2 medical applications of alkali metals and alkaline earth metals, 37 of metals, 88 of noble gases, 84 of transition metals, 5153 memory devices, 89 Mendeleyev, Dmitri, 1116, 28, 78 mercury, 23, 50, 52, 53 metalloids, 29, 65, 67. See also BCNOs metals. See also alkali metals; alkaline earth metals; transition metals actinides, 4344, 54, 5557, 5962 lanthanides, 4344, 54, 5559 medical uses of, 88 properties of, 29 transuranium elements, 5455 Meyer, Lothar, 13 misch metal, 58 molybdenum, 52 Montreal Protocol, 82 MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), 84 Periodic Kingdom, The (Atkins), 23 periodic pattern chemical reactions and, 2225 electron shells and, 2022 periodic table of elements, 9293 alternative forms of, 2628 description of, 24 development of, 1113, 1516 how to read, 25, 2829 as imaginary landscape, 23 phosphorus, 7, 69 platinum, 48 platinum-based anticancer drugs, 5152 plutonium-based spacecraft fuel, 6162 poisons absorption of toxic elements by body, 68 BCNOs, 7375 halogens, 77 organophosphates, 69 radioactive isotopes, 3940, 41 transition metals, 53 polarized materials, 3334 pollutants, 81, 82 poor metals, 65, 67. See also BCNOs postage stamps, 57 potassium chloride, 37 potassium compounds, 33 potassium-argon dating, 4142 protons, 19 pyrotechnicians, 35
nanoparticles, 72 nanotube memory devices, 89 neodymium, 59 neon, 81 nerve gases, 69 neutrons, 19 NIB magnets, 59 nickel, 46, 48, 53 nitrogen, 69 Nobel, Alfred, 69 noble gases, 77, 7879, 8185 nonmetals, 29, 65, 67, 77. See also BCNOs; halogens; noble gases nonreactive vs. reactive elements, 2225 nuclear power plants, 61 nucleus, 19
radiation, 41 radiation poisoning, 40, 41 radioactive isotopes, 41 radioactivity, 3942 radium, 3940 Radium Girls, 3940, 41 radon, 8485 Ralstonia metallidurans, 49 rare earths, 57. See also lanthanides reactive vs. nonreactive elements, 2225 reactivity of alkali metals and alkaline earth metals, 30, 31 of BCNOs, 6667 of halogens, 77 of noble gases, 79 of transition metals, 45 refined metals, 46 Royal Society of Chemistry Web site, 23
s block, 33 s orbital, 25
Index 113
salt, 30, 34 salt taxes, 34 scandium, 15, 16 scientific fraud, 63 Seaborg, Glenn, 59 sances, 14 selenium, 7273 semiconductors, 29, 75 silicon, 29, 73, 75, 83 silver, 50 silver iodide, 50 smog, 69 smoke detectors, 62 sodium chloride, 30, 34 sodium compounds, 33 solder, 70 solids, 23 spacecraft, 12, 6162 Spiritualism, 14 stainless steel, 46 steel, 46 street lamps, gas-lit, 62 strontium, 37 sugar of lead, 74 sulfur, 70, 87 superatoms, 88 superconductors, 5051 superheavy elements, 6264 symbols for elements, 15, 25 tooth fillings and caps, 52 toxins. See poisons trains, levitating, 5051 trans fats (hydrogenated oils), 38, 39 transfermian elements, 6264 transition, defined, 45 transition metals alloys of, 46 industrial uses of, 4651 medical uses of, 5153 position in periodic table, 4344 properties of, 4446 transuranium elements, 5455 triangular periodic table, 27 tungsten, 4950, 8283
valence electrons, 24 valence shell, 22, 45 Voyager spacecraft, 12, 6162 vulcanization, 70
xing, 6 X-rays, 37
table salt, 30, 34 tantalum, 47 technetium, 5253 thorium street lamps, 62 titanium, 4648, 52 titanium dioxide, 46, 48 tooth decay, fluoride and, 79
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bEckyHaM received a B.A. in Anthropology from The University of Arizona and a Ph.D. in Biological Anthropology from New York University. She was a teaching assistant for anthropology and gross anatomy classes at New York University and has done archaeology and paleontology fieldwork in Arizona, Israel, and Tanzania. She is a science writer for the Center for the Advancement of Health and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She has written articles on science and health topics for Health magazine, Discovery.com, and MSNBC.com, among other publications. She is a regular contributor to the American Chemical Society member- ship tabloid Chemistry.
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