Successive Ionisation Energy

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A level Chemistry (3.1 The Periodic Table) Flashcards on Successive Ionisation Energy, created by Yinka F on 03/03/2018.
Yinka F
Flashcards by Yinka F, updated more than 1 year ago
Yinka F
Created by Yinka F about 6 years ago
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Question Answer
What can you work out from successive ionisation energies of an element? The number of electrons in each shell of the atom and which group the unknown element is in
What does a graph showing successive ionisation energy look like?
What happens to successive ionisation energy within each shell? Within each shell, successive ionisation energies increase
Why do successive ionisation energies increase within each shell? Electrons are being removed from an increasingly positive ion - there's less repulsion amongst the remaining electrons, so more energy is needed to remove the next electron
What do the big jumps in successive ionisation energy indicate? When a new shell is broken into - an electron is being removed form a shell closer to the nucleus. This can be used to work out which group the element belongs to
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