arranged the elements in order of increasing atomic masses
found their was a pattern to the properties of the elements, hence, the Periodic Table
had blank spaces for elements not yet discovered
accurately predicted the properties of these elements
Moseley
arranged the elements in order of increasing atomic numbers
way we organize the periodic table today
Organization
vertical columns are called groups or families
each group of elements have similar properties because they have the same outer number of electrons
horizontal rows are called Periods
Elements within the same period do not have similar properties
elements to the left of the stairstep line are metals Metals
include transition metals , and inner transition metals(lanthanoids and actinoids)
are solids at room temperature (except Hg)
have a high luster(are shiny) when clean
are good conductors of heat and electricity
are ductile (can be drawn into thin wires)
are malleable(can be flattened into sheets)
elements to the right of the stairstep line are nonmetals Nonmetals
are gases or brittle solids at room temperature (except Br)
do not conduct heat or electricity well
elements next to the stairstep line are metalloids
metalloids have properties of both metals and nonmetals.
Different Labeling of the Periodic Table
You will find that there are 2 main ways the families of the periodic table are organized.
Most modern sources use the 1-18 means of labeling the families (including Glencoe Physical Science)
Addison-Wesley Chemistry uses the A/B labeling
representative elements(and group 0) are the group A elements
group B elements are the transition metals
Both forms of labeling are in the chemistry book on page 108
Be familiar with both, as different standardized tests use different versions
No big deal, just check out the periodic table included as a reference first
Arrangements of the elements are the same, just the headings are different