The Periodic Table: Three Views.

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Abbreviated table, Electronegativities, Biologically Important Elements

The periodic table is an arrangement of the elements by increasing atomic number. Since the electrons add to energy levels in a regular pattern, elements with similar chemical properties tend to repeat themselves with a set period. This allows the table to be constructed such that elements that are most alike in chemical properties are in the same column.

 

The first view shows an abbreviated version of the periodic table from the Las Alomos National Laboratory.
 
 
Abbreviated table, Electronegativities, Biologically Important Elements

This second table charts the elements by electronegativities. Dark blue: highest electronegativity, red, lowest. Electronegativity is a measure of an atom's tendency to grab electrons from other atoms. The electronegativities run from low electronegativity in red to high electronegativity in blue. Elements that are strongly electronegative such as oxygen or fluorine strongly grag and hold electrons.
 
 
Abbreviated table, Electronegativities, Biologically Important Elements

Biologically Important Elements This view of the periodic tabl, high-lights the 26 elements that are important to living things. These include the big six: Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus(CHNOPS). The rest are generally considered trace elements. They are often very important but needed in much smaller amounts.
 

 

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