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Group 1 - chemical reactions with oxygen and chlorine

Reactions with oxygen

The group 1 elements react with oxygen from the air to make metal .

At room temperature, oxygen reacts with the surface of the metal. This forms a white oxide, which covers the surface. The metal below the surface does not react.

The burn vigorously when heated and placed in a gas jar of oxygen. The oxide forms as white smoke.

For example:

sodium + oxygen 鈫 sodium oxide

4Na(s) + O2(g) 鈫 2Na2O(s)

The of the group 1 elements increases down the group, so their reactions with oxygen get more vigorous.

Question

Predict which becomes white more quickly on exposure to air - a piece of rubidium, or a piece of lithium. Explain your answer.

Reactions with chlorine

The group 1 elements react vigorously with chlorine. The products of the reactions are chlorides. At room temperature the chlorides are white solids. They dissolve in water to form colourless solutions. For example:

sodium + chlorine 鈫 sodium chloride

2Na(s) + Cl2(g) 鈫 2NaCl(s)

The reactions with chlorine get more vigorous going down the group.

Question

Write a balanced equation for the reaction of potassium with chlorine.

Explaining the trend in reactivity

When a group 1 element takes part in a reaction, each of its loses its outer electron to form a positively charged . The more easily the ions form, the more reactive the metal.

Going down group 1:

  • the atoms become larger
  • the outer electron becomes further from the
  • the force of attraction between the nucleus and the outer electron decreases
  • the outer electron is lost more easily
Table showing electronic structures of group 1 elements, lithium, sodium and potassium. Group 1 elements have similar properties and reactions as they all have one electron in their outer shell.