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Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

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Page 1: Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

Mr. Brincks Physical Science

2009 -2010Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

Page 2: Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

The Periodic Table has changed over time

That was then… This is now…This is a picture of

Dmitri Mendeleev's 1st draft version for the periodic table (click image to enlarge)

This is an example of how the periodic table looks like today. (click image to enlarge)

Page 3: Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

Modern Day Periodic TableFront side (Full-Scale) Back side (Full-Scale)

Page 4: Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

The FounderThis is a picture of a young Dmitri Mendeleev, also known as, the father of the periodic table! (More Info.)

Page 5: Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

More about Mendeleev and his periodic tableScientific benefits of Mendeleev's tableMendeleev predicted the discovery of other elements and left space for these new elements, namely eka-silicon (germanium), eka-aluminium (gallium), and eka-boron (scandium). Thus, there was no disturbance in the periodic table. He pointed out that some of the then current atomic weights were incorrect. He provided for variance from atomic weight order. Shortcomings of Mendeleev's tableHis table did not include any of the noble gases, which were discovered later. These were added by Sir William Ramsay as Group 0, without any disturbance to the basic concept of the periodic table. There was no place for the isotopes of the various elements, which were discovered later.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mendeleev_Table_5th_II.jpg

Page 6: Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

Various other images of the periodic table and its founder

Interactive Web Periodic Tables

WebElements 2.0 beta by Mark Winter at the University of Sheffield has almost everything you would ever want to know.

The Chemicool Periodic Table from MIT

A Periodic Table from the Los Alamos National Laboratory

Periodic Tables compiled by the Illinois State Geological Survey.

Periodic Table of the Elements (Flash required)

More Periodic Tables

Mendeleev’s Periodic Table http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/pe

riodic-table-large.jpg

More Pictures of Mendeleev

Portrait of Mendeleev by Ilya Repin (1885).

One more Mendeleev portrait by Ivan Kramskoy (1878).

Collection of Mendeleev photos. From The Science & Society Picture Library.

One memorial portrait of Mendeleev.

Page 7: Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

Discussion Questions How are the elements

organized in the periodic table?

What are some of the properties of the elements by which they can be organized?

How was Mendeleev's periodic table different from those of other chemists of the time?

What kinds of information about the atomic structure of an element can you learn from the periodic table?

What can you tell about the elements from the way they are ordered in the table?

How can the periodic table help you predict how atoms of different elements might combine?

Describe one type of chemical bond - metallic, ionic, or covalent.

Air is approximately 21 percent oxygen gas (O2) and 78 percent nitrogen gas (N2). Can you tell from the information in the periodic table why helium balloons float in air?

Which would you predict would be the heaviest and the lightest materials that would be good conductors of electricity?

If carbon monoxide leaked into your house, would you predict that it would float to the top of the room or stay near the floor? What about carbon dioxide?

Page 8: Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art

References Microsoft office clipart Teachers' Domain, Periodic Table of the Elements essay, published

February 20, 2004, retrieved on August 24, 2009,http://www.teachersdomain.org/resource/phy03.sci.phys.matter.ptabledoc/

Teachers' Domain, Periodic Table of the Elements, published February 20, 2004, retrieved on August 24, 2009,http://www.teachersdomain.org/resource/phy03.sci.phys.matter.ptable/

http://www.chemheritage.org/classroom/chemach/pop/04periodic/meyer1.html

http://www.abcgallery.com/K/kramskoy/kramskoy63.html http://www.scienceandsociety.co.uk/results.asp?X9=Mendeleyev http://www.mendcomm.org/images/page1.jpg http://www.periodictable.com/Posters/Poster3.sample.JPG http://www.periodictable.com/Posters/Poster3.back.sample.JPG http://www.periodictable.com/PosterVideo/LiveAction/

Phosphorus.mov http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/periodic-table-large.jpg

Page 9: Mr. Brincks Physical Science 2009 -2010 Courtesy of Microsoft Office Clip Art