Periodic trends describe how chemical and physical properties of elements change across periods (left to right) and down groups (top to bottom) in the Periodic Table. These trends arise due to variations in atomic structure – especially effective nuclear charge, number of shells, and electron configurations. Understanding these trends helps predict the behavior of elements during chemical reactions. The following section expands the NCERT content based on screenshots, rewritten with clearer explanations and 75% additional detail.

Atomic Radius

The atomic radius refers to the distance from the nucleus to the outermost electron shell. Although atoms do not have a sharp boundary, several practical definitions exist – metallic radius, covalent radius, and van der Waals radius.

Atomic Radius Across a Period

As we move from left to right across a period:

  • Effective nuclear charge increases.
  • Electrons are added to the same shell.
  • Shielding remains almost constant.
  • Therefore, atomic radius decreases.

Atomic Radius Down a Group

As we move from top to bottom:

  • New shells are added.
  • Atomic size increases significantly.
  • Increased shielding outweighs nuclear charge.

Additional Explanation

Because electrons experience greater attraction toward the nucleus across a period, the overall atomic size contracts, even though the number of electrons increases. Down the group, the added shells create a much larger electron cloud that expands the size.

Ionic Radius

The ionic radius refers to the radius of a charged atom (ion). It differs depending on whether the ion is positive (cation) or negative (anion).

Cations

  • Formed by loss of electrons.
  • Fewer electrons → lower repulsion.
  • Higher effective nuclear charge per electron.
  • Results in a smaller radius than the parent atom.

Anions

  • Formed by gain of electrons.
  • Increased repulsion among electrons.
  • Lower effective nuclear charge per electron.
  • Radius becomes larger than the parent atom.

Isoelectronic Species

Species such as O²⁻, F⁻, Na⁺, Mg²⁺, Al³⁺ all contain 10 electrons but vary in nuclear charge. As nuclear charge increases, ionic radius decreases.

Ionization Enthalpy

Ionization enthalpy is the amount of energy required to remove an electron from an isolated gaseous atom.

Trends Across a Period

  • Ionization enthalpy increases left → right.
  • Effective nuclear charge increases.
  • Harder to remove an electron as attraction strengthens.

Trends Down a Group

  • Ionization enthalpy decreases.
  • Outer electrons are farther from the nucleus.
  • Shielding increases.

Exceptions

  • Elements with half-filled or fully filled subshells have slightly higher IE.
  • Example: Be, N, Mg, P.

Electron Gain Enthalpy

Electron gain enthalpy refers to the energy released or absorbed when an electron is added to a neutral gaseous atom.

Trends Across a Period

  • Generally becomes more negative.
  • Nuclear attraction increases.
  • Halogens show the highest (most negative) values.

Trends Down a Group

  • Becomes less negative.
  • Larger atomic size reduces attraction.
  • Exceptions: Fluorine vs chlorine (F is smaller → higher repulsion).

Electronegativity

Electronegativity is the tendency of an atom to attract a shared pair of electrons in a bond.

Trends

Across a period:

  • Increases due to high effective nuclear charge.

Down a group:

  • Decreases as atomic radius increases.

Significance

  • Determines bond type (ionic, polar covalent, nonpolar covalent).
  • Predicts chemical reactivity.
  • Influences molecular polarity.

Valence and Oxidation State

Valence refers to the combining capacity of an element. Oxidation state indicates the apparent charge an atom has in a compound.

Key Points

  • Main group elements follow predictable oxidation states.
  • Transition elements show variable oxidation states due to d-orbital involvement.

Factors Influencing Periodic Trends

Several factors combine to create observable periodic patterns:

  • Effective nuclear charge: Attraction experienced by valence electrons.
  • Shielding effect: Inner electrons reduce nuclear pull.
  • Atomic radius: Larger atoms exert weaker pull.
  • Electron configurations: Stability of half- and fully filled orbitals.

Summary Table of Periodic Trends

Below are the expanded tables based on the screenshots, rewritten for clarity and alignment with NCERT data.

Atomic Radii (pm) Across the Periods

AtomLiBeBCNOF
Atomic Radius (pm)1521118877706664

Atomic Radii (pm) Down a Group

Atom (Group 1)LiNaKRbCs
Atomic Radius (pm)152186231244262

 

Atom (Group 17)FClBrI
Atomic Radius (pm)6499114140

Ionic Radii of Cations and Anions (pm)

IonO²⁻F⁻Na⁺Mg²⁺Al³⁺
Ionic Radius (pm)1401331027253

First Ionization Enthalpies (kJ/mol)

ElementLiBeBCNOFNe
IE₁ (kJ/mol)52089980110861402131416812081

Electron Gain Enthalpies (kJ/mol)

GroupHLiNaKRb
ΔHₑ (kJ/mol)–73–60–53–48–46

 

Group 16OSSeTe
ΔHₑ (kJ/mol)–141–200–195–190

 

Group 17FClBrI
ΔHₑ (kJ/mol)–328–349–325–295

Electronegativity Values (Pauling Scale)

Atom (Period 2)LiBeBCNOF
Electronegativity1.01.52.02.53.03.54.0

 

Atom (Period 3)NaMgAlSiPSCl
Electronegativity0.91.21.51.82.12.53.0

Periodic Trends in Valence

PropertyAcross a PeriodDown a Group
Atomic RadiusDecreasesIncreases
Ionic RadiusCations ↓, Anions ↑Increases
Ionization EnthalpyIncreasesDecreases
Electron Gain EnthalpyMore negativeLess negative
ElectronegativityIncreasesDecreases
Metallic CharacterDecreasesIncreases

Shielding or Screening Effect

Inner-shell electrons partially shield the outer electrons from the nucleus. This decreases effective nuclear charge. Because of this:

  • Across a period, shielding is nearly constant but nuclear charge increases → size decreases.
  • Down a group, shielding increases → atomic size increases.

Example anomalies:

  • Beryllium (Be) has higher IE than Boron (B) because removing an electron from Be’s filled 2s subshell is harder than removing one from B’s 2p.
  • Nitrogen (N) has higher IE than Oxygen (O) because N has a half‑filled stable 2p³ configuration.

Diagonal Relationship (Li–Mg, Be–Al)

Certain second‑period elements resemble diagonally adjacent third‑period elements due to similar charge densities and radii.

  • Lithium and Magnesium share similar solubility patterns and thermal stability.
  • Beryllium and Aluminium form covalent compounds and amphoteric oxides.

Anomalous Behaviour of Second Period Elements

Second‑period elements (Li, Be, B, C, N, O, F) differ from heavier congeners because:

  • They have only four orbitals (2s, 2pₓ, 2pᵧ, 2p𝓏).
  • Their atoms and ions are smaller.
  • They form stronger π‑bonds.
  • They show different coordination numbers.

Metallic vs Non‑Metallic Character

  • Metallic character decreases across a period as IE increases.
  • Metallic character increases down a group as atoms become larger.

Acidic/Basic Nature of Oxides

  • Basic oxides → Left side of periodic table (e.g., Na₂O).
  • Amphoteric oxides → Middle (e.g., Al₂O₃).
  • Acidic oxides → Right side (e.g., Cl₂O₇).

Atomic Radii Across Second Period

ElementLiBeBCNOF
Atomic Radius (pm)1521118877706664

Atomic Radii Down Alkali Metals

AtomLiNaKRbCs
Atomic Radius (pm)152186231244262

Ionic Radii Trends

Cations shrink due to loss of shells and increased nuclear pull, while anions expand due to extra electron repulsion.

First Ionization Enthalpies of Second‑Period Elements

ElementLiBeBCNOFNe
IE₁ (kJ/mol)52089980110861402131416812081

First Ionization Enthalpies of Alkali Metals

ElementLiNaKRbCs
IE₁ (kJ/mol)520496419403376

Electron Gain Enthalpies

GroupElementΔHₑ (kJ/mol)
1H–73
1Li–60
1Na–53
1K–48
1Rb–46
16O–141
16S–200
16Se–195
16Te–190
17F–328
17Cl–349
17Br–325
17I–295

Electronegativity

Period 2LiBeBCNOF
EN Value1.01.52.02.53.03.54.0

 

Period 3NaMgAlSiPSCl
EN Value0.91.21.51.82.12.53.0

Valence Trends

Group121314151617
Valence Electrons1234567
Common Valence12343,421

NCERT Problems and Solutions

Problem 3.5

Which is the largest? Li⁺, Be²⁺, B³⁺, C⁴⁺

Solution: All are isoelectronic (1s²2s²2p⁶). Higher nuclear charge → smaller size. Largest = Li⁺.

Problem 3.6

Predict whether first IE of Al will be:

  • more or less than Mg
  • and whether IE₁ of Na > Al

Solution:

  • IE₁(Al) < IE₁(Mg) because removing a 3p electron is easier.
  • IE₁(Al) > IE₁(Na) because effective nuclear charge increases.

Problem 3.7

Most negative electron gain enthalpy: Cl

Least negative: P

Explanation included from NCERT.

Problem 3.8

Predict formulas:

  • Si + F → SiF₄
  • Al + Br → AlBr₃

Problem 3.9

Oxidation state of Al in
[AlCl(H₂O)₅]²⁺ = +3.

Problem 3.10

Reaction with water:

  • Na₂O + H₂O → 2NaOH (basic)
  • Cl₂O₇ + H₂O → 2HClO₄ (acidic)

FAQs

Q1: What is the general trend of atomic radius in the periodic table?

Atomic radius decreases across a period due to increased nuclear charge and increases down a group because additional shells are added.

Q2: Why do cations become smaller than their parent atoms?

Cations lose electrons, reducing repulsion and increasing effective nuclear charge per electron, shrinking the size.

Q3: Which element has the highest electronegativity?

Fluorine has the highest electronegativity because of its small size and high effective nuclear charge.

Q4: Why does electron gain enthalpy become less negative down a group?

Larger atomic size and increased shielding reduce the attraction for additional electrons.

Q5: What causes exceptions in ionization enthalpy trends?

Half-filled and fully filled subshells provide extra stability, increasing ionization enthalpy unexpectedly.

Conclusion

Periodic trends offer a powerful framework to understand the structure and behavior of elements. By examining how atomic size, ionization enthalpy, electron gain enthalpy, electronegativity, and valence vary across the periodic table, we can predict chemical reactivity and bonding patterns with greater accuracy. Mastery of these trends not only helps in examinations but also deepens overall understanding of modern chemistry.

 

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