AQA A-Levelโ€บ Inorganic Chemistryโ€บ 3.2.1 Periodicityโ€บ Physical Properties of Period 3 Elements
3.2.1

Physical Properties of Period 3 Elements

Understand and explain the periodic trends in atomic radius, first ionisation energy, and melting/boiling points of Period 3 elements.

Across Period 3 (from sodium to argon), elements exhibit distinct physical trends. These trends are determined by the electronic structure of the atoms, their nuclear charge, and the type of structure and bonding they form.

๐Ÿ”‘ Key Principle

Physical properties across Period 3 are dictated by structure and bonding. The period is divided into three distinct types of structure: giant metallic lattices (Na, Mg, Al), a giant covalent lattice (Si), and simple molecular lattices (Pโ‚„, Sโ‚ˆ, Clโ‚‚, Ar).

Trend 1: Atomic Radius

The atomic radius is a measure of the size of an atom. Across Period 3, the atomic radius decreases from sodium (\(\text{Na}\)) to chlorine (\(\text{Cl}\)).

Atomic Radius Trend Across Period 3 190 160 130 100 Atomic Radius / pm Period 3 Elements Na Mg Al Si P S Cl

Explanation:

  1. Nuclear Charge Increases: The number of protons in the nucleus increases by one with each successive element across the period (from +11 in \(\text{Na}\) to +17 in \(\text{Cl}\)).
  2. Shielding remains roughly constant: Electrons are added to the same principal energy level (the 3rd shell). The inner shells of core electrons (\(1\text{s}^2 2\text{s}^2 2\text{p}^6\)) provide a constant level of shielding.
  3. Stronger Attraction: The increased nuclear charge attracts the outer shell electrons more strongly, pulling them closer to the nucleus and decreasing the atomic radius.
๐Ÿ“ AQA Examiner Tip

Argon (\(\text{Ar}\)) is typically excluded from covalent radius comparisons. As a noble gas, it exists as monatomic atoms and does not form covalent bonds under standard conditions. Thus, its size is measured via its van der Waals radius, which appears artificially larger because the weak intermolecular forces allow atoms to remain further apart than covalently bonded atoms.

Trend 2: 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. Generally, the first ionisation energy increases across Period 3 from sodium to argon. This is because of the increased nuclear charge, smaller atomic radius, and constant shielding, making it harder to remove outer electrons.

However, there are two key exceptions to this general increase:

Trend 3: Melting Points

Unlike radius and ionisation energy, melting point trends cannot be explained solely by atomic trends. Instead, they depend on the physical structure and bonding type of each substance.

Melting Points of Period 3 Elements 1687 K (Si) 933 K (Al) 392 K (S) Melting Point / K Period 3 Elements Na Mg Al Si Pโ‚„ Sโ‚ˆ Clโ‚‚ Ar METALLIC GIANT COVALENT SIMPLE MOLECULAR

1. Na, Mg, Al: Metallic Structure

Sodium, magnesium, and aluminium are metals with giant metallic lattices. Their melting points increase across this series because metallic bonding gets progressively stronger:

This leads to a stronger electrostatic attraction between positive metal ions and the surrounding sea of delocalised electrons, requiring more energy to overcome.

๐Ÿ“– Definition: Metallic Bonding

Metallic bonding is the strong electrostatic attraction between a lattice of positive metal ions and a sea of delocalised valence electrons.

2. Si: Giant Covalent Structure

Silicon is a macromolecular metalloid with a giant covalent structure (similar to diamond). Its melting point is exceptionally high because melting it requires breaking many strong, localized covalent silicon-silicon (\(\text{Si}-\text{Si}\)) bonds. Breaking these strong covalent bonds requires a vast amount of thermal energy.

๐Ÿ“– Definition: Giant Covalent Structure

A giant covalent structure (macromolecular) is a network of atoms linked together by strong covalent bonds extending throughout a giant 3D lattice.

3. Pโ‚„, Sโ‚ˆ, Clโ‚‚, Ar: Simple Molecular Structures

Phosphorus, sulfur, chlorine, and argon exist as simple molecules or monatomic atoms. Their structures are simple molecular lattices:

When these substances melt, it is not the covalent bonds within the molecules that are broken. Instead, you only need to overcome the weak intermolecular forces (London/van der Waals forces) holding the molecules together. Since these forces are weak, these elements have relatively low melting points.

The trend in melting points among these non-metals is: \(\text{S}_8 > \text{P}_4 > \text{Cl}_2 > \text{Ar}\). This trend is explained by molecule size:

๐Ÿ“ AQA Examiner Tip

Always state the structure and bonding type first before explaining trends. In exam questions, never state that "covalent bonds are broken" when melting sulfur, phosphorus, or chlorine. You are only overcoming weak intermolecular (van der Waals) forces. Silicon is the only non-metal in Period 3 where covalent bonds actually break during melting.

Period 3 Physical Properties Summary

Element Atomic Number Atomic Radius / pm 1st Ionisation Energy / kJ molโปยน Melting Point / K Structure type Primary Bonding Type
Sodium (Na) 11 186 496 371 Giant metallic Metallic
Magnesium (Mg) 12 160 738 923 Giant metallic Metallic
Aluminium (Al) 13 143 578 933 Giant metallic Metallic
Silicon (Si) 14 118 789 1687 Giant covalent Covalent
Phosphorus (Pโ‚„) 15 110 1012 317 Simple molecular Covalent (intramolecular), van der Waals (intermolecular)
Sulfur (Sโ‚ˆ) 16 102 1000 392 Simple molecular Covalent (intramolecular), van der Waals (intermolecular)
Chlorine (Clโ‚‚) 17 99 1251 172 Simple molecular Covalent (intramolecular), van der Waals (intermolecular)
Argon (Ar) 18 (188 van der Waals) 1521 84 Monatomic van der Waals (intermolecular)
โœ๏ธ Worked Example: Explaining Melting Point Trends
  1. Explain why aluminium has a higher melting point than sodium.
  2. Explain why sulfur has a higher melting point than phosphorus.

Part 1: Aluminium vs Sodium

  • Both aluminium and sodium form giant metallic lattices with metallic bonding.
  • The aluminium ion (\(\text{Al}^{3+}\)) has a higher charge than the sodium ion (\(\text{Na}^+\)).
  • Aluminium contributes more delocalised electrons (3 per atom) than sodium (1 per atom).
  • The \(\text{Al}^{3+}\) ion is smaller than the \(\text{Na}^+\) ion.
  • Therefore, the electrostatic attraction between positive ions and delocalised electrons is stronger in aluminium, requiring more thermal energy to overcome.

Part 2: Sulfur vs Phosphorus

  • Both sulfur and phosphorus exist as simple molecular lattices with weak van der Waals forces between molecules.
  • Sulfur exists as larger \(\text{S}_8\) molecules, whereas phosphorus exists as smaller \(\text{P}_4\) molecules.
  • Because \(\text{S}_8\) molecules contain more electrons (128 electrons) than \(\text{P}_4\) molecules (60 electrons), they form stronger instantaneous dipole-induced dipole (van der Waals) forces.
  • More thermal energy is required to overcome the stronger intermolecular forces in sulfur, resulting in a higher melting point.
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