Atomic Radius
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Atomic Radius
I don't exactly understand an aspect of the atomic radius trend. Does the atomic radius increase across a row as you keep adding more electrons to the same shell? I know there would be more electron repulsion with lets say flourine rather than boron, so does that cause a radius increase?
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Re: Atomic Radius
Atomic radius increases as you move from the top right corner of the periodic table to the bottom left. As you add more electrons the radius increases until a new shell is added when you move down to the next period
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Re: Atomic Radius
The radius increases as you go down a group (because you're adding more shells) and decreases as you go to the right across a period (because electrons are added to the same shell and the electrostatic attraction increases L-->R so the increasing nuclear charge draws them inwards and radii length decreases).
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Re: Atomic Radius
I still don't fully understand. If you're going horizontally across a row does atomic radius increase or decrease? And how about going down a column?
Re: Atomic Radius
As you are going towards the right the radius decreases and as you are going up it decreases as well. The reason that it decreases as you go across is because you are adding more protons and those are pulling the electrons in closer to the nucleus making it smaller. It decreases as you go up because there are less orbitals and therefore it is smaller.
Re: Atomic Radius
Diana A 1G wrote:I still don't fully understand. If you're going horizontally across a row does atomic radius increase or decrease? And how about going down a column?
Going horizontally across a period, the radius decreases.
Going vertically down a column, the radius increases.
The vertical trend plays a dominant role in comparison to the horizontal trend.
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Re: Atomic Radius
The trend would demonstrate that from right to left and top to bottom, the atomic radius would increase.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Atomic radius increases down the row because there are more electron orbitals and shielding leads to less effective nuclear charge, therefore the size of the atom is greater. Atomic radius decreases across the row from left to right because there is a larger number of protons that increases effective nuclear charge and pulls on the orbitals and decreases radius.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Atomic radius will increase as you go down the periodic table, and will also increase as you move from right to left each period!
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Re: Atomic Radius
Atomic radius increases going left across and down groups of the periodic table. Having higher atomic numbers means having more protons that pull the electrons closer to the nucleus, decreasing the atomic radius as you move right across the periodic table.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Atomic radius increases down the row. Atomic radius decreases across the row from left to right.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Atomic radius decreases from left to right and increases as you go down. It increases as you go down because the number of energy levels increases, so there is a greater distance between the nucleus and the outermost orbital. From left to right it decreases because of the charges of the nucleus pulls the electrons closer. But going down a column adds a new shell causing them to be further away.
This little poster might help you understand the trends better
file:///Users/jaclynschwartz/Downloads/mastering-periodic-trends-infographic.pdf
This little poster might help you understand the trends better
file:///Users/jaclynschwartz/Downloads/mastering-periodic-trends-infographic.pdf
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Re: Atomic Radius
An easy way to remember it is that as you go down a group, additional levels of shells are added, which adds tangible size to the atom. Across a period, the atomic radii decreases because as more electrons are added in the same shell, the effective nuclear charge, or Zeff, increases. This is the opposites attract mechanism that pulls the nucleus closer to those outer electrons, making it smaller and hence making the ionization energy so large.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Atomic radius is largest at the bottom left of the periodic table and weakest at the top left. You can assume that the atom gets bigger when it gains shells which could explain the phenomenon when it moves from top to bottom. The way I was explained the phenomenon from left to right in AP chem was that the greater amount of protons would draw the outer electrons closer to the nucleus. Hope this helps!
Re: Atomic Radius
The atomic radius increases when going down a group as more shells are added, whereas the radius decrease when gong from left to right due to the fact that more electrons are added as it gains shells when it gets bigger. Therefore the atomic radius is the highest in the bottom left part of of the periodic table and lowest when in the top left corner.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Atomic radius decreases as you got from left to right across the same period/row. This is because there are more electrons, increasing the attraction towards the nucleus. As we go down a column, the radius increases because the electrons are being added to another energy level.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Atomic radius is highest at the bottom left of the periodic table. As you go down a group, another shell is added for the electrons, which increases the radius. It decreases as you move to the right of a period because their is a higher charge between the added electron and the nucleus (positive charge) which pulls in the electrons causing the radius to shrink.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Going across a row would result in more electron repulsions, though I believe that the increase in the number of protons in the nucleus would overcome this.
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Re: Atomic Radius
The atomic radii will increase as you move down the group because electrons are being added to other shells, and the radii will decrease across a period as an increase in electrons will result in a higher nuclear charge pulling the electrons tighter towards the nucleus. Hope this helps:)
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Re: Atomic Radius
The atomic radius decreases as you down a row. However, when you go across a row, the atomic radius decreases. This is because as you go across the periodic table, there is an increase or protons (+ charge in the nucleus). As a result, this increase of nuclear charge makes the electrons more attracted to the nucleus and consequently come closer to the nucleus. This makes the atom smaller and as a result, make its radius smaller.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Hi! I think everyone above covered it pretty well, but if you're still having trouble, I like to draw out the trends (color-coded if you want) on a periodic table to kind of solidify them in my memory. So including the others: ionization energy and electron affinity decrease down (vertically) a group/column and increase across (horizontally) a period/row, while atomic radii (and ionic) increase down (vertical) a group and decrease across (horizontal) a period.
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Re: Atomic Radius
The atomic radius depends upon the effective nuclear charge and number of shells. Across a period, the nuclear charge increases, and the number of shells remain the same, so the size decreases. However down the group, though both the effective nuclear charge and the number of shells increases, the magnitude of the increase in the number of shells overpowers the effective nuclear charge and the atomic size also increases.
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Re: Atomic Radius
The general periodic table trend for atomic radius is that it decreases as you go across a period (left to right), and increases going down a column. The reason behind the decrease in atomic radius from left to right is due to how the addition of protons, meaning the increase in atomic number, causes the electron cloud to become increasingly attracted to the nucleus of the atom, thus shrinking the size of it. When going down column-wise, the atomic radius increases because of the addition of energy levels, which implies that there is more distance between the nucleus and the outermost parts of the electron cloud. I believe that vertical trend supersedes the influence of the horizontal trend for the majority of elements, if not all of them. For your other question about fluorine vs. boron, fluorine's atomic radius would be smaller than boron due to how it is further right and hence, has more protons.
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Re: Atomic Radius
More electrons = larger radius
However, there is a bigger increment once they start going into other orbitals or passing N=2.
However, there is a bigger increment once they start going into other orbitals or passing N=2.
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Re: Atomic Radius
The atomic radius will increase as you go down a group because there are additional shells that are farther from the nucleus. The reason why it will decrease across a period is that even though there might be more electrons, those electrons are in the same shell. An increase in the nuclear charge will pull the electrons closer to the nucleus, resulting in a smaller atomic radius.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Atomic radius decreases as you go across a period due to increasing nuclear charge. The stronger nuclear charge leads to an increased attraction between the positively charged protons in the nucleus and negatively charged electrons surrounding it. This leads to the electrons, including the valence electrons, being drawn closer to the nucleus, which drecreases the atomic radius. Atomic radius increases as you go down a group due to the shells also increasing as you go down. With each additional shell, the distance between the nucleus and valence electrons grows, meaning that the atomic radius increases.
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Re: Atomic Radius
Hi, the atomic radius decreases as you go across the period from left to right because of the increase in valence electrons, while it increases when you go down the groups because there's more subshells. Hope this helps!
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Re: Atomic Radius
The atomic radius increases from top to bottom and right to left of the periodic table :)
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Re: Atomic Radius
The decrease of atomic radius as you travel across the periodic table horizontally is a result of increasing number of protons, pulling the electrons closer without the electrons jumping further away as they would down a group.
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