One of these systems is more common in America and the other in Europe but there is really only room for one convention on a small planet, which is where the IUPAC systems scores. It is easy to see the origins of the confusion! 1 The two schemes are shown in the table below, underneath the new IUPAC scheme in the first row. Unfortunately there is enormous confusion here. There are two other ways of labelling the groups, and both use labels 1-8 (often in Roman numeral format) with further A and B labels. This is a good recommendation in the sense that it is at least unambiguous. The latest recommendations from IUPAC (the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry) require that these be labelled 1 – 18 from left to right. The elements Sc, Y, and the lanthanoids are sometimes referred to as the rare earths.The s-, p-, and d-blocks contain a total of 18 groups. In addition the elements 57-71 (lanthanum-lutetium) are referred to as the lanthanoids (lanthanides) and the elements 89-103 (actinium-lawrencium) are referred to as the actinoids (actinides). Some of these special names are listed in the Table. Terms such as the “alkali metals” are in very common use whereas the term “pnictogens” is very much less common. Earlier labelling schemes (Trivial Group names)įor historical reasons some Groups have special names. These are labelled from 1 to 18 under current IUPAC numenclature. In the standard form of the periodic table the s-block, p-block, and d-block elements are organised into 18 vertical columns called groups.
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