The Periodic Table (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Chemistry)
Revision Note
Written by: Alexandra Brennan
Reviewed by: Stewart Hird
The Periodic table
There are over 100 chemical elements which have been isolated and identified
Each element has one proton more than the element preceding it
This is done so that elements end up in columns with other elements which have similar properties
Elements are arranged on the periodic table in order of increasing atomic number
The table is arranged in vertical columns called groups and in rows called periods
The period number
Periods are the horizontal rows that show the number of shells of electrons an atom has and are numbered from 1 - 7
Elements in Period 2 have two electron shells, elements in Period 3 have three electron shells
The group number
Groups are the vertical columns that show how many outer electrons each atom has
They are numbered from 1-7 with a final group called Group 0 (instead of Group 8)
Group 4 elements have atoms with 4 electrons in the outermost shell, Group 6 elements have atoms with 6 electrons in the outermost shell and so on
The group number can help determine the charge that metal and non-metal ions form
For metals, the group number corresponds to the number of electrons it will lose to achieve a full outer shell and the charge of the metal ion
Sodium is in Group 1, it will lose 1 electron and form an ion with a 1+ charge
Magnesium is in Group 2, it will lose 2 electrons and form an ion with a 2+ charge
For non-metals in Group 7 and 6, they will gain 1 and 2 electrons respectively to gain a full outer shell
E.g. non-metals in Group 7 gain 1 electron to form ions with a 1- charge
Non-metals in Group 6 gain 2 electrons to form ions with a 2- charge
The Periodic Table
All elements are arranged in the order of increasing atomic number from left to right
Examiner Tip
The group number is always labelled on the periodic table but the period number isn't.
Don't forget that hydrogen and helium are in Period 1.
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