The Noble Gas Family

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The Noble Gas Family “our family album” Mo, Gabbie and Kamile

description

The Noble Gas Family. “our family album”. Mo, Gabbie and Kamile. Noble Gases. Krypton, Neon, and Xenon are all brothers with Sir William Ramsay and Morris Travers as their parents. Their half brother is Argon who’s parents are Sir William Ramsay and Lord Rayleigh. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Noble Gas Family

Page 1: The Noble Gas Family

The Noble Gas Family“our family album”

Mo, Gabbie and Kamile

Page 2: The Noble Gas Family

Noble Gases

Krypton, Neon, and Xenon are all brothers with Sir

William Ramsay and Morris Travers as their

parents.

Their half brother is Argon who’s parents are Sir William Ramsay

and Lord Rayleigh.

Their cousin is Radon who’s parent is Friedrich Ernst Dorn.

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Neon was born in 1898 in England by Sir William Ramsay & Morris Travers.

Neon has 10 protons, neutrons and electrons. It is a non-metal and has a density of 0.901.

Melting Point: -249°C (-416°F)

Boiling Point: -246°C (-411°F)

Neon

8 Valence electrons

Oxidation number is 0

Neon is not reactive.

Pro: Neon doesn’t react, so there is no worry combining it.

Con: Can cause dizziness, dullness, and suffocation if inhaled

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Argon

Pro: Used to fill incandescent and fluorescent light bulbs to prevent oxygen from corroding the hot filament.

Con: If with a liquid it can cause frostbite

Argon was born in 1894 in England by Sir William Ramsay & Lord Rayleigh .

Argon has 18 protons and electrons. It has 22 neutrons. It is a non-metal and has a density of 0.0017837 .

8 Valence electrons

Oxidation number is 0

Neon is not reactive. Melting Point: -189°C (-309°F)

Boiling Point: -186°C (-303°F)

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Krypton

Birthday: May 30, 1898

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The Parents

Sir William Ramsey

Morris M. Travis

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It’s a Non-metal!

# of Protons: 36# of Neutrons: 48# of Electrons: 36

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Characteristics

Density: 0.003733 g/cm3

Boiling Point: -153.22°C

Melting Point: -157.36°C

Specific Heat: 0.248

Heat Conductivity: 0.00009 W/cm K

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Chemical Description

# of Valence: 8

Oxidation Number: 0

Reactivity: NonePossible Compounds:

•w/ oxygen halides

•w/ hydrogen oxides

•w/ hydrogen hydrides

“an odorless, colorless gas”

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The Good and the Bad

Used in: Lighting products Substitute for gas

in fluorescent lights

Is pretty safe Doesn’t react

with other elements

Dangers can cause:

Suffocation If with liquid;

frostbite

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Xeon

William Ramsay and Morris M. Travers discovered July 12, 1898 through the “study of liquefied air”. Xenon is a gas the Earth's atmosphere.

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Xeon

Protons-54Neutrons-77Electrons-548 valence electrons

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Xeon Characteristics

nonmetal

Density @ 293 K: 5.8971 g/cm3

Melting Point: -111.9 °C (161.25 K, -169.42 °F)

Boiling Point: -108.1 °C (165.05 K, -162.58 °F)

Density: 0.005887 grams per cubic centimeter

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Xenon

Electrical Conductivity- S cm-1 Specific heat (100 kPa, 25 °C) 20.786

J·mol-1·K-1

Ion: None Reactivity: None Oxidation: 0

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Xeon

Used for powerful lamps and in spacecrafts for the iron thrusters, and as a general anesthetic

If breathed in excessively without the right amount of oxygen it can be harmful due to the things its composed from.

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Radon

Friedrich Ernst Dorn, a German chemist, in discovered radon in 1900 while studying radium’s decay chain.

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Radon

Protons-86Neutrons- 136Electrons-868 valence electrons

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Characteristics

Nonmetal

Density @ 293 K: 9.73 g/cm3

Melting Point: -71.0 °C (-95.8 °F)

Boiling Point: -61.8 °C(-79.24 °F)

specific heat- 0.09 J g-1 K-1

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Radon

specific heat- 0.09 J g-1 K-1

Ion: noneOxidation: 0Reactivity: noneCompounds: Radon Fluoride

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Radon

Treatment of cancer; radiation, but not widely used do to the dangers

If inhaled it is dangerous. Number one cause of lung cancer to non smokers.

Invisible

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Sources

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/pertab/kr.html

http://www.portlandschools.org/CTS/GrantsProjects/driscc/elements/krypton/krypton.html

ttp://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1904/ramsay.jpg&imgrefurl=http://nobelp

www.todayinsci.com/.../TraversMorrisThm.jpg http://education.jlab.org/itselemental/ele054.html http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/antenna/pain/

http://frenchquarterradiationfree.com/index.html http://www.catalogus-professorum-halensis.de/dornernst.html

http://www.inchem.org/documents/icsc/icsc/eics0604.htm