AQA A-Level Inorganic Chemistry 3.2.2 Group 2 Trends in Group 2 Properties
3.2.2

Trends in Group 2 Properties

Explore trends in atomic radius, first ionisation energy, melting point, and reactivity down the Alkaline Earth Metals group.

The Group 2 elements (beryllium, magnesium, calcium, strontium, and barium) are known as the alkaline earth metals. All Group 2 elements have an outer electron configuration ending in \(ns^2\). They lose these two outer shell s-electrons to form stable \(2+\) cations with a noble gas configuration.

🔑 Key Principle: Configuration

All Group 2 elements have two outer shell electrons in an s sub-shell. As you go down the group, these electrons occupy shells with a higher principal quantum number (\(n\)), making them further from the nucleus.

1. Trend in Atomic Radius

📖 Definition: Atomic Radius

Atomic radius is a measure of the size of an atom, defined as half the distance between the nuclei of two adjacent, bonded atoms of the same element.

The atomic radius of Group 2 elements increases down the group from beryllium to barium.

Atomic Radius Trend Down Group 2 200 pm 150 pm 100 pm Group 2 Elements Atomic Radius / pm Be 112 Mg 160 Ca 197 Sr 215 Ba 222

Explanation:

  1. Additional Electron Shells: As you descend Group 2, each successive element possesses one more principal energy level (electron shell) than the one above it.
  2. Increased Shielding: The increased number of inner shells provides a greater shielding effect, protecting the outer shell valence electrons from the full attractive force of the nucleus.
  3. Greater Distance: The outer shell electrons are located further from the positive nucleus. Although the number of protons increases (higher nuclear charge), the effect of the extra electron shell and increased shielding far outweighs this, leading to a weaker attractive force and a larger atomic radius.

2. Trend in First Ionisation Energy

The first ionisation energy of Group 2 elements decreases down the group from beryllium to barium.

First Ionisation Energy Trend Down Group 2 900 700 500 Group 2 Elements 1st Ionisation Energy / kJ mol⁻¹ Be Mg Ca Sr Ba
📖 Definition: First Ionisation Energy

The first ionisation energy is the energy required to remove one mole of electrons from one mole of gaseous atoms to form one mole of gaseous 1+ ions.

The ionisation processes can be represented by the following chemical equations:

First Ionisation Energy:

\[ \text{X(g)} \rightarrow \text{X}^+\text{(g)} + \text{e}^- \]

Second Ionisation Energy:

\[ \text{X}^+\text{(g)} \rightarrow \text{X}^{2+}\text{(g)} + \text{e}^- \]

Explanation:

  1. Increased Atomic Radius and Shielding: As you go down Group 2, the outermost electrons occupy shells that are further from the nucleus, experiencing greater shielding from a larger number of inner electron shells.
  2. Weaker attraction: Despite the increasing nuclear charge (number of protons), the combined effects of the increased distance and shielding dominate. As a result, the outermost electrons experience a weaker electrostatic attraction to the nucleus.
  3. Easier to remove: Because the outer electrons are held less tightly, less thermal energy is required to remove them. Therefore, first and second ionisation energies decrease down the group.
📝 AQA Examiner Tip

When asked to explain trends down a group, you must always structure your answer by explicitly mentioning all three factors: nuclear charge, atomic radius (distance), and shielding. Use phrasing like: "Although the nuclear charge increases, the increased shielding and distance outweigh this, leading to a weaker electrostatic attraction..." to secure full marks.

3. Trend in Melting Points

Melting points generally decrease down Group 2 from beryllium to barium. This is due to a weakening of the metallic bonding.

Group 2 elements are metals that form giant metallic lattices. The strength of metallic bonding down Group 2 decreases because:

⚠️ Exception: Magnesium Anomaly

While the general trend is a decrease down the group, magnesium does not fit this pattern perfectly. Magnesium has a significantly lower melting point than expected (923 K compared to calcium's 1115 K). This anomaly is due to differences in the crystal packing arrangements of the metallic lattices (magnesium has a hexagonal close-packed structure, whereas beryllium has hexagonal close-packed, calcium has face-centered cubic, and barium has body-centered cubic). The packing arrangement in magnesium leads to a less compact structure, weakening the metallic attraction slightly.

4. Trend in Reactivity

The chemical reactivity of Group 2 elements with water increases down the group.

Explanation:

During chemical reactions, Group 2 metals are oxidised as they lose their two valence electrons to form \(2+\) ions. Since first and second ionisation energies decrease down the group (due to greater shielding and atomic radius), it becomes easier for the atoms to lose these outer electrons. Consequently, reactivity increases from beryllium to barium.

✏️ Worked Example: Explaining Ionisation Trends
Explain why barium has a lower first ionisation energy than magnesium.

Answer:

  • Barium is located lower down Group 2 than magnesium, meaning it has more principal electron shells.
  • Therefore, barium has a larger atomic radius than magnesium, and the outermost electron is further from the nucleus.
  • Barium has more inner electron shells than magnesium, which provides greater shielding against the nuclear charge.
  • Although barium has a higher nuclear charge (56 protons vs 12 protons in magnesium), the effects of increased distance and shielding outweigh this.
  • As a result, the electrostatic attraction between the positive nucleus and the outermost electron is weaker in barium, meaning less energy is required to remove it.
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