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14: Electrons in Atoms and the Periodic Table

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    105345
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    • 14.1: The Perioidic Table
      The chemical properties of elements is determined primarily by the number and distribution of valence electrons.
    • 14.2: Electron Configurations
      Based on the Pauli principle and a knowledge of orbital energies obtained using hydrogen-like orbitals, it is possible to construct the periodic table by filling up the available orbitals beginning with the lowest-energy orbitals (the aufbau principle), which gives rise to a particular arrangement of electrons for each element (its electron configuration). Hund’s rule says that the lowest-energy arrangement of electrons is the one that places them in degenerate orbitals with parallel spins.
    • 14.3: Electron Configurations and the Periodic Table (The Block Method)
      The arrangement of electrons in atoms is responsible for the shape of the periodic table. Electron configurations can be predicted by the position of an atom on the periodic table.
    • 14.4: Electron Configurations of Ions
    • 14.5: Periodic Trends: Atomic Size, Ionization Energy, and Metallic Character
      Certain properties—notably atomic radius, ionization energy, electron affinity and metallic character—can be qualitatively understood by the positions of the elements on the periodic table.


    14: Electrons in Atoms and the Periodic Table is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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