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CHEMISTRY



                                   (CHAPTER-THE P-BLOCK ELEMENTS)


                    SUBTOPIC - GR.13 ELEMENTS ( BORON  FAMILY )TRENDS IN

                    ATOMIC PROPERTIES,  PHYSICAL PROPERTIES, CHEMICAL
                    PROPERTIES, SOME IMPORTANT COMPOUNDS OF BORON, USES OF

                    BORON AND ALUMINIUM AND THEIR COMPOUNDS

                    KEY NOTES:

                       •  TRENDS IN ATOMIC PROPERTIES

                         Group 13 elements are B, Al, Ga, In,Tl
                        The outer electronic configuration of these elements is ns2np1.
                        Boron and aluminium have noble gas core, gallium and indium

                          have noble gas plus  10 d-electrons, and thallium has noble gas

                          plus 14 f- electrons plus 10 d-electron cores.
                        Atomic radius of Ga is less than that of Al.  This is due to
                          variation in the inner core of the electronic configuration. The

                          additional 10 d-electrons offer only poor screening effect  for
                          the outerelectrons from the increased nuclear charge in

                          gallium.
                        The observed discontinuity in the ionisation enthalpy values

                          between Al and Ga, andbetween In and Tl are due to inability of
                          d- and f-electron which have low screening effect, to

                          compensate the increase in nuclear charge.
                        Down the group, electronegativity first decreases from B to Al

                          and then increases.
                        TRENDS IN PHYSICAL PROPERTIES

                       •  Boron is non-metallic in nature. Metallic character increases
                          down the group.

                       •  The m.p decreases from B to Ga and then increase onwards.
                          Due to very strong crystalline lattice, boron has unusually high

                          melting point. Ga has extremely low m.p due to decrease in
                          magnitude of close packing.
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