Periodic Table and Chemical Bonding

Periodic Table and Chemical Bonding

🔷 What is the Periodic Table?

The Periodic Table of Elements is a chart that organizes all known chemical elements based on their atomic number, electron configuration, and recurring chemical properties.

📌 Created by: Dmitri Mendeleev in 1869


🧩 Structure of the Periodic Table

Part of Table Description
Periods (rows) Horizontal lines (1 to 7); show energy levels (electron shells)
Groups (columns) Vertical columns (1 to 18); elements in the same group have similar properties
Metals On the left; shiny, conduct electricity, often solid
Nonmetals On the right; gases or brittle solids, poor conductors
Metalloids In between; have properties of both metals and nonmetals

🌟 Important Groups

Group Name Number Example Elements Properties
Alkali metals 1 Na, K Very reactive, soft metals
Alkaline earth 2 Ca, Mg Reactive metals
Halogens 17 F, Cl, I Very reactive nonmetals
Noble gases 18 He, Ne, Ar Very stable, do not react easily
Transition metals 3–12 Fe, Cu, Zn Good conductors, form colorful compounds

⚛️ Atomic Number and Mass

  • Atomic number = number of protons (defines the element)

  • Atomic mass = protons + neutrons (average mass of the atom)


🔗 What is Chemical Bonding?

Chemical bonding is how atoms connect to form molecules or compounds by sharing or transferring electrons.


🔵 Types of Chemical Bonds

Bond Type How It Works Example
Ionic Bond One atom transfers electrons to another NaCl (salt)
Covalent Bond Atoms share electrons H₂O (water), CO₂
Metallic Bond Electrons move freely between metal atoms Iron, Copper

💡 More About Each Bond

  1. Ionic Bonds:

    • Between metals and nonmetals

    • Forms ions (charged atoms): cations (+), anions (–)

    • Strong bond, forms crystals (e.g. table salt)

  2. Covalent Bonds:

    • Between nonmetals

    • Can be single, double, or triple bonds (sharing 1, 2, or 3 pairs)

    • Examples: water (H₂O), methane (CH₄), oxygen gas (O₂)

  3. Metallic Bonds:

    • Between metal atoms

    • Electrons are free to move → good conductivity and malleability


🧪 Why Do Atoms Bond?

  • To become more stable

  • Most atoms want a full outer electron shell (8 electrons – "octet rule")

  • Noble gases already have this, which is why they don’t react much


Summary

  • The Periodic Table organizes elements by atomic number and properties

  • Elements in the same group have similar chemical behavior

  • Chemical bonds form so atoms can become more stable

  • Main bond types: Ionic, Covalent, and Metallic

Note: All information provided on the site is unofficial. You can get official information from the websites of relevant state organizations