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10.4.3: Modern Periodic Table- Periods and Groups

  • Page ID
    476546
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    Learning Objectives
    • Know how groups and periods are used to organize the modern periodic table, and how this relationship expresses the similarities among the elements.

    The periodic table has undergone extensive changes in the time since it was originally developed by Mendeleev and Moseley. Many new elements have been discovered, while others have been artificially synthesized. Each fits properly into a group of elements with similar properties. The periodic table is an arrangement of the elements in order of their atomic numbers, so that elements with similar properties appear in the same vertical column or group.

    The figure below shows the most commonly used form of the periodic table. Each square shows the chemical symbol of the element along with its name. Notice that several of the symbols seem to be unrelated to the name of the element: \(\ce{Fe}\) for iron, \(\ce{Pb}\) for lead, etc. Most of these are the elements that have been known since ancient times and have symbols based on their Latin names. The atomic number of each element is written above the symbol.

    The periodic table showing organization of groups as vertical columns and periods as horizontal rows.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\) (Credit: User:Cepheus/Wikimedia Commons; Source: wikimedia; License: Public Domain)

    A period is a horizontal row of the periodic table. There are seven periods in the periodic table, with each one beginning at the far left. A new period begins when a new principal energy level begins filling with electrons. Period 1 has only two elements (hydrogen and helium), while periods 2 and 3 have 8 elements. Periods 4 and 5 have 18 elements. Periods 6 and 7 have 32 elements, because the two bottom rows that are separate from the rest of the table belong to those periods. These two rows are pulled out in order to make the table itself fit more easily onto a single page.

    A group is a vertical column of the periodic table, based on the organization of the outer shell electrons. There are a total of 18 groups. There are two different numbering systems that are commonly used to designate groups, and you should be familiar with both. The traditional system used in the United States involves the use of the letters A and B. The first two groups are 1A and 2A, while the last six groups are 3A through 8A. The middle groups use B in their titles. Unfortunately, there was a slightly different system in place in Europe. To eliminate confusion, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) decided that the official system for numbering groups would be a simple 1 through 18 from left to right. Many periodic tables show both systems simultaneously.

    You might notice two rows of elements towards the bottom of the periodic table that seem unconnected to the rest of it. These elements do fit with the rest of the elements, but the width of the periodic table would have to be much greater to fit them in. You can look at the numbers to see where they fit in. These rows of elements are called series, and are named for whichever element is first in the series: lanthanides and actinides.

    Most recent depictions of the periodic table show an incomplete seventh period. In fact, many of those seventh period elements were not known before the early twentieth century. Many elements have been synthesized by bombarding known elements with sub-atomic particles such as neutrons or alpha particles. Uranium has been used in this manner to produce elements 93-100. Larger elements (atomic numbers 101 and above) are formed by fusing nuclei of smaller elements together. These synthetic elements tend to be very unstable, often existing for less than a second, so little is known about them.

    The video below reviews groups and trends in the periodic table.

    Section Summary

    • The periodic table is arranged in order of atomic number.
    • A period is a horizontal row of the periodic table.
    • A group is a vertical row of the periodic table.

    Glossary

    period
    a horizontal row on the periodic table whose properties are repeated in adjacent rows.
    group
    a vertical column of the periodic table, within which are similar properties.

    This page titled 10.4.3: Modern Periodic Table- Periods and Groups is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jamie MacArthur via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.