Group 1 (Alkali Metals) (Edexcel GCSE Chemistry)
Revision Note
Group Classification
Elements are arranged on the Periodic table in order of increasing atomic number where each element has one proton more than the element preceding it
The table is arranged in vertical columns called groups numbered I – VIII and in rows called periods
The period number tells you the number of electron shells an atom has:
E.g. elements in period 3 have 3 electron shells
The group number tells you how many outer electrons each atom has:
E.g. group 6 elements have atoms with 6 electrons in the outermost shell
The periodic table positions elements based on their properties which are linked to their electronic configurations
Elements with the same number of electrons in the outer shell and hence similar chemical properties are placed in the same group
This allows us to use the table to predict the properties of elements based on their position
Groups 1, 7 and 0 are elements which have been classified into their respective groups using the periodic table
The periodic table is a road map of all the elements
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Physical Properties in Group 1
The group 1 metals are known as the alkali metals
They form alkaline solutions when they react with water
The group 1 metals are lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, caesium and francium and they are found in the first column of the periodic table
The alkali metals lie on the far left of the periodic table, in the very first group
The alkali metals share similar characteristic physical properties
Some of these properties are:
They are all soft metals which can easily be cut with a knife
They have relatively low densities and low melting points
They are very reactive (they only need to lose one electron to become highly stable)
The melting points of the alkali metals
How Alkali Metals React with Water
Reaction with water
The reaction of the group 1 metals with water provides evidence for categorising these elements into the same chemical family
The general pattern shown is:
group 1 metal + water ⟶ metal hydroxide + hydrogen
2M (s) + 2H2O (l) ⟶ 2MOH (aq) + H2 (g)
where M is Li, Na, K, Rb or Cs
The hydroxides formed all have the same general formula and are colourless, aqueous solutions
The metals are so named because they form alkalis in water
Sodium reacts vigorously with cold water
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Remember the group 1 metals all produce alkaline solutions (>pH 7) when they react with water.Lithium will produce a solution of lithium hydroxide; sodium will produce a solution of sodium hydroxide and so on.Make sure you can give the reaction equations with the correct state symbols to show what is happening during the reactions!
Trends in Group 1
Trends are patterns of behaviour in physical or chemical properties
Following these trends seen in lithium, sodium and potassium, we can say that:
Rubidium, caesium and francium will react even more vigorously with air and water than the first three alkali metals
Of the alkali metals, lithium is the least reactive (as it is at the top of group 1) and francium would be the most reactive (as it’s at the bottom of group 1)
Using the information given in the trends we would predict that rubidium:
would be a soft grey solid
would appear shiny when freshly cut
would be more dense than potassium (> 0.86 g cm-3)
would have a lower melting point than potassium (< 63.5 oC)
Examiner Tips and Tricks
You could be asked to make predictions about how rubidium would be expected to react with water, knowing that it lies below potassium in group 1. Words like 'explosively' and 'violently' would be good ones to choose when describing the reaction.
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