griefchan said:
We can see on the periodic table most of the elements are metallic but why?
is there any relevance to the electronic configuration?
Um - yeah. It has to do with the electronic config, and the outermost electrons. Note the two groups on the left - alkali and alkaline Earth from period 2 and down, they are metals. The groups in the middle 3- groups 3-12 (in periods 4-7) are the transition metals (they fill d-subshell). To the right is a region that has some metals, semi-metals, non-metals (in which the p-subshell progressively fills) and to the far right as the p-shell fills, they become gases, and farthest right column with full s
2p
6 configurations are the noble (monatomic) gases.
I can't find any helpful web-site to solve this problem.Please give me some relevant information to read and find out the reason~~~Please help!
http://www.webelements.com/
http://periodic.lanl.gov/default.htm - shows different groups - but boundary between metal and semi-metal is not clear.
http://www.elementsdatabase.com/ - groups semi-metals with non-metals.
http://education.jlab.org/itselemental/index.html - shows which are solid, liquid and gas at room temperature or STP.
Some periodic tables show which are metal, semi-metal, non-metal and gas, but unfortunately most do not.
Semi-metals are B, Si, As, Sb, Te, At - to the left of the left most non-metals are metals.
Non-metals are C, P, S, Se
Halogens - F, Cl, are gases, Br is liquid, and I is solid at room temperature. Br and I have very low melting/boiling points and are conisdered volatiles.
See also electron configuration -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron_configuration
http://education.jlab.org/qa/electron_config.html