By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Trace the development of the periodic table from Dobereiner to Moseley
  • 2State the modern periodic law and classify elements into s, p, d, f blocks
  • 3Explain periodic trends in atomic and ionic radius
  • 4Compare ionisation enthalpy, electron gain enthalpy, and electronegativity across periods and groups
  • 5Account for anomalies such as IE of N > O and Be > B
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Why this chapter matters
The periodic table is the organising principle of chemistry. Understanding the modern periodic law, the s/p/d/f block classification, and periodic trends in atomic radius, ionisation enthalpy, electron gain enthalpy, and electronegativity lets you predict the chemical behaviour of any element -- the foundation for bonding and reactions.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Classification of Elements and Periodicity

'The periodic table is a map of the elements — a guide to the chemical universe.' — Chemistry

1. Chapter Overview

The PERIODIC TABLE is one of the GREATEST intellectual achievements — a systematic ARRANGEMENT of all known elements that reveals PERIODIC TRENDS in properties. This chapter covers the HISTORICAL development of the periodic table (Dobereiner, Newlands, Mendeleev, Moseley), the MODERN PERIODIC LAW based on atomic number, ELECTRONIC CONFIGURATIONS of elements, and PERIODIC TRENDS in atomic radius, ionisation energy, electron gain enthalpy, and electronegativity.


2. Historical Development

Dobereiner's Triads (1817)

  • Groups of THREE elements with SIMILAR properties
  • Atomic weight of middle element ≈ AVERAGE of the other two
  • Example: Li (7), Na (23), K (39) → (7+39)/2 = 23 ✓

Newlands' Law of Octaves (1864)

  • Every EIGHTH element has similar properties (like musical notes)
  • Worked only up to calcium (failed for heavier elements)

Mendeleev's Periodic Table (1869)

  • Elements arranged by INCREASING ATOMIC MASS
  • Periodic Law: Properties of elements are PERIODIC function of atomic mass
  • Left GAPS for undiscovered elements (predicted Ga, Ge, Sc)
  • Limitations: Position of isotopes, anomalous pairs (Ar-K, Co-Ni)

Moseley's Modern Periodic Law (1913)

  • Modern Law: Properties are PERIODIC function of ATOMIC NUMBER (not mass)
  • Based on X-ray spectra studies
  • Eliminated the anomalies in Mendeleev's table

3. Modern Periodic Table

Blocks Based on Electronic Configuration

BlockLast electron entersGroupsElements
sns¹-²1, 2Alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, H, He
pnp¹-⁶13-18Non-metals, metalloids, noble gases
d(n-1)d¹-¹⁰3-12Transition metals
f(n-2)f¹-¹⁴Inner transitionLanthanoids and Actinoids

Periods

  • Period 1: 2 elements (H, He)
  • Period 2,3: 8 elements each
  • Period 4,5: 18 elements each
  • Period 6: 32 elements (includes lanthanoids)
  • Period 7: Incomplete

Groups

  • 18 groups (1-18, IUPAC numbering)
  • Elements in SAME group have SIMILAR chemical properties (same number of valence electrons)

Atomic Radius

  • Decreases ACROSS a period (↑ Z, ↑ nuclear charge, electrons added to same shell)
  • Increases DOWN a group (↑ new shells, ↑ shielding)
  • Types: Covalent radius, metallic radius, van der Waals radius

Ionic Radius

  • Cations are SMALLER than parent atoms (loss of outer shell)
  • Anions are LARGER than parent atoms (gained electrons, more repulsion)

Ionisation Enthalpy (ΔᵢH)

  • Definition: Energy required to remove the MOST LOOSELY bound electron from an isolated atom
  • Increases ACROSS a period (↑ nuclear charge, ↓ size)
  • Decreases DOWN a group (↑ size, ↑ shielding)
  • Exceptions: Group 2 > Group 3 (ns² stability), Group 15 > Group 16 (np³ half-filled stability)
  • IE₁ < IE₂ < IE₃ (each removal gets harder)

Electron Gain Enthalpy (Δₑ₉H)

  • Definition: Energy change when an electron is added to an isolated atom
  • Most negative (favourable) for Group 17 (halogens want one electron)
  • Noble gases have POSITIVE Δₑ₉H (already stable)
  • Variation: Becomes more negative ACROSS a period (↑ Z, ↓ size)

Electronegativity (χ)

  • Definition: Tendency of an atom to ATTRACT shared electrons in a bond
  • Increases ACROSS a period, decreases DOWN a group
  • Pauling scale: F (4.0) > O (3.5) > N (3.0) > Cl (3.0)
  • Most electronegative: Fluorine
  • Least electronegative: Francium / Caesium

PropertyAcross Period (L→R)Down Group (T→B)
Atomic RadiusDECREASESINCREASES
Ionisation EnthalpyINCREASES*DECREASES
Electron Gain EnthalpyMore NEGATIVELess negative**
ElectronegativityINCREASESDECREASES
Metallic CharacterDECREASESINCREASES
Non-metallic CharacterINCREASESDECREASES

*With exceptions (Be-B, N-O)
**With exceptions (Cl > F in some cases due to small size of F)


6. s, p, d, f Block Elements — Key Features

s-Block Elements

  • Group 1 (Alkali metals): ns¹, VERY reactive, strong reducing agents
  • Group 2 (Alkaline earth metals): ns², less reactive than Group 1

p-Block Elements

  • Include metals, non-metals, and metalloids
  • Group 17 (Halogens): HIGHEST electronegativity
  • Group 18 (Noble gases): COMPLETELY filled p-subshell (inert)

d-Block Elements (Transition Metals)

  • Variable oxidation states
  • Form COLOURED compounds
  • Catalytic activity
  • Paramagnetism (unpaired electrons)

f-Block Elements (Inner Transition)

  • Lanthanoids: 4f, similar properties across series (lanthanoid contraction)
  • Actinoids: 5f, RADIOACTIVE

7. Common Mistakes

  1. IE of N > O: N has HALF-FILLED 2p³ (stable), O has 2p⁴ (electron-electron repulsion makes removal easier)
  2. EG of Cl is more negative than F: F's small size causes electron-electron repulsion, making electron gain less favourable despite higher EN
  3. Atomic radius of noble gases is van der Waals radius, not covalent: Noble gas radii appear larger than halogen radii in the same period
  4. IE₂ >> IE₁: Removing an electron from a CATION requires much more energy than from a neutral atom
  5. Metallic character ≠ number of metals: It describes tendency to lose electrons (form cations)

8. CBSE Exam Focus

  1. Modern periodic law — grouping into s, p, d, f blocks (3-mark)
  2. Periodic trends — atomic radius, IE, EG, EN (5-mark)
  3. Reasons for exceptions in IE (N > O, Be > B)
  4. Comparison of properties across period and down group (5-mark)
  5. Anomalous properties of second-period elements
  6. Mendeleev's table — merits and limitations

9. Key Formulas (Conceptual)

  • IE₁ < IE₂ < IE₃... (successive IEs increase)
  • Pauling EN: χ_A — χ_B = 0.208√(Δ) where Δ = bond energy deviation
  • Screening (shielding) constant: σ (Slater's rules)
  • Z_eff = Z — σ

10. Self-Test (5+ Q&A)

Q1: Arrange Na, Mg, Al, Si in increasing order of IE₁. A: Na < Mg < Al < Si. Actually: Na < Al < Mg < Si (Mg has stable 3s², so higher than Al).

Q2: Why is the ionic radius of Cl⁻ larger than that of Cl? A: Cl⁻ has gained an electron → increased electron-electron repulsion → EXPANDED electron cloud.

Q3: What is the lanthanoid contraction? What is its consequence? A: Gradual DECREASE in atomic/ionic radius across lanthanoid series (poor shielding of 4f electrons). Consequence: Zr and Hf have NEARLY IDENTICAL radii and very similar properties.

Q4: Which element has the highest electronegativity and why? A: FLUORINE (F = 4.0 on Pauling scale). It has small size, high nuclear charge, and requires only ONE electron to achieve noble gas configuration.

Q5: Explain the anomalous trend in IE: Boron (B) has lower IE than Beryllium (Be). A: Be has [He]2s² configuration (FILLED s-subshell, extra stability). B has [He]2s²2p¹ — the 2p electron is EASIER to remove than a 2s electron (higher energy, better shielded).


11. Conclusion

The periodic table is not just a chart — it is the ORGANISING PRINCIPLE of chemistry. Understanding the trends in atomic radius, ionisation energy, electron gain enthalpy, and electronegativity allows you to PREDICT chemical behaviour across elements. The block classification (s, p, d, f) connects electronic configuration to position in the table. Mastering these periodic relationships is ESSENTIAL for understanding chemical bonding, reactions, and compound properties.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Effective nuclear charge
Z_eff = Z - sigma
sigma is the shielding (screening) constant from Slater's rules.
Successive ionisation enthalpies
IE1 < IE2 < IE3 ...
Each successive electron is harder to remove from an increasingly positive ion.
Pauling electronegativity difference
chi_A - chi_B = 0.208 sqrt(delta)
delta is the bond energy deviation in kcal/mol.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Saying IE of O > N
IE of N > O because N has a stable half-filled 2p3 configuration, while O's 2p4 has electron-electron repulsion making removal easier.
WATCH OUT
Assuming electron gain enthalpy of F is more negative than Cl
Cl has the most negative electron gain enthalpy; F's small size causes electron-electron repulsion that reduces the energy released.
WATCH OUT
Treating cations and anions as the same size as the parent atom
Cations are smaller (lost a shell); anions are larger (added electrons increase repulsion).
WATCH OUT
Confusing periodic law of mass with atomic number
The MODERN periodic law is based on atomic number (Moseley), not atomic mass (Mendeleev).

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM· Trends
Arrange Na, Mg, Al, Si in increasing order of first ionisation enthalpy and justify any anomaly.
Show solution
Na < Al < Mg < Si. IE generally increases across a period, but Mg has a stable filled 3s2 configuration, so its IE is higher than Al (3s2 3p1), whose loosely-held 3p electron is easier to remove.
Q2MEDIUM· Reasoning
Why is the ionic radius of Cl- larger than the atomic radius of Cl?
Show solution
Cl- has gained an electron, increasing electron-electron repulsion in the same shell, which expands the electron cloud and increases the radius.
Q3HARD· Lanthanoid Contraction
What is the lanthanoid contraction and one of its consequences?
Show solution
It is the steady decrease in atomic and ionic radius across the lanthanoid series due to the poor shielding of the 4f electrons. A consequence is that Zr and Hf have nearly identical radii and very similar chemical properties.
Q4EASY· Reasoning
Which element has the highest electronegativity and why?
Show solution
Fluorine (4.0 on the Pauling scale) -- it has a small size, high nuclear charge, and needs only one electron to complete its octet, giving it a strong pull on shared electrons.
Q5MEDIUM· Anomaly
Explain why boron has a lower first ionisation enthalpy than beryllium.
Show solution
Be has a stable filled 2s2 configuration. B is [He]2s2 2p1, and its 2p electron is at higher energy and better shielded, so it is easier to remove than a 2s electron of Be -- giving B a lower IE.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Modern periodic law: properties are a periodic function of atomic number (Moseley).
  • Blocks: s (groups 1-2), p (13-18), d (3-12), f (inner transition).
  • Atomic radius decreases across a period, increases down a group.
  • Ionisation enthalpy increases across a period, decreases down a group (with exceptions at N/O and Be/B).
  • Electron gain enthalpy is most negative for halogens; noble gases are positive.
  • Electronegativity increases across a period, decreases down a group; F is highest.
  • Metallic character decreases across a period and increases down a group.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 6-8 marks across the chapter

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Periodic trends3-51-2Atomic radius, IE, EGE, electronegativity across period and group
Reasoning / anomalies2-31N > O, Be > B, Cl > F exceptions
Classification1-31Block and group of an element from its configuration
Prep strategy
  • Memorise the across-period and down-group trends table
  • Learn the reasons for the standard anomalies
  • Connect electronic configuration to block and group
  • Practise arranging elements in order of a given property

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Predicting reactivity

Periodic trends let chemists predict which elements react vigorously, form acids or bases, or act as oxidising and reducing agents.

Material design

Choosing elements for alloys, semiconductors, and catalysts relies on understanding their position and trends in the periodic table.

Discovery of new elements

Mendeleev's gap-filling method showed how the table predicts the properties of elements before they are discovered.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Memorise the trend-comparison table and quote it directly
  2. Always justify anomalies with half-filled or filled subshell stability
  3. Use Z_eff and shielding to explain size and IE trends
  4. Identify an element's block and group from its configuration

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Use Slater's rules to calculate Z_eff for valence electrons in second-period elements.
  • Investigate diagonal relationships (Li-Mg, Be-Al) and the inert pair effect in heavy p-block elements.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 11 Chemistry examHigh
JEE Main and Advanced (Periodic Table)High
NEET ChemistryHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Although fluorine is higher in the group, its very small size means the incoming electron experiences strong electron-electron repulsion from the densely packed 2p electrons. Chlorine's larger 3p subshell accommodates the new electron with less repulsion, so chlorine releases more energy and has the more negative electron gain enthalpy.

Merits: it arranged elements systematically by atomic mass, grouped similar elements, and left gaps to correctly predict undiscovered elements like Ga, Ge, and Sc. Limitations: it could not place isotopes, had anomalous pairs (Ar-K, Co-Ni) where mass order broke the property pattern, and gave hydrogen no fixed position. These were resolved by Moseley's atomic-number-based modern law.
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Last reviewed on 29 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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