परमाणु इलेक्ट्रॉनों को ग्रहण एवं उनका त्याग क्यों करते हैं?
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Answer:
The columns of the periodic table, which contain elements that show a family resemblance, are called groups. All members of a particular group have analogous outermost (valence) electron configurations, suggesting that all members of a group should show a family relationship in the types and numbers of the chemical bonds that they are able to form. The horizontal rows of the periodic table are called periods. Each period corresponds to the successive occupation of the orbitals in a valence shell of the atom, with the long periods corresponding to the occupation of the orbitals of a d subshell. Successive periods down the table correspond to successively higher values of n for the valence shell. The first period (consisting of only hydrogen and helium) corresponds to n = 1, the second period (from lithium to neon) to n = 2, and so on. These successive periods correspond to atoms in which the valence shell is outside a more electron-rich core of inner completed shells. Each of the first six periods terminates at a noble gas, with a closed-shell electron configuration. The replication of analogous electron configurations that characterizes the periodic table is an example of the periodicity of the elements and is responsible for the overall pattern of the elements when arranged as Dmitri Mendeleev, with chemical insight and without the benefit of quantum mechanics, had originally proposed.
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