A periodic table group is a vertical column in the periodic table of the chemical elements. There are 18 groups in the standard periodic table.
It is no accident that several of these correspond directly to chemical series: the periodic table was originally created to organize the known chemical series into a single coherent scheme.
The modern explanation of the pattern of the periodic table is that the elements in a group have similar (conch) configurations of the outermost electron shells of their atoms: as most chemical properties are dominated by outer electron interactions, this tends to give elements in the same group similar physical and chemical properties.
There is considerable confusion surrounding the two old systems in use (old IUPAC and CAS) that combined the use of Roman numerals with letters. In the old IUPAC system the letters A and B were designated to the left (A) and right (B) part of the table, while in the CAS system the letters A and B were designated to main group elements (A) and transition elements (B). The former system was frequently used in Europe while the latter was most common in America. The new IUPAC scheme was developed to replace both systems as they confusingly used the same names to mean different things.
The periodic table groups are as follows (in the brackets are shown the old systems: European and American):
Chemical element groups | Periodic table
Periodieke tabel groep | مجموعة جدول دوري | Grupu de la tabla periódica | Група на периодичната система | Grup de la taula periòdica | Skupina (periodická tabulka) | Gruppe des Periodensystems | Grupo de la tabla periódica | Grupo de la perioda tabelo | Groupe du tableau périodique | 주기율표 족 | Flokkur (lotukerfið) | Gruppo della tavola periodica | Rōpū ripanga pūmotu | Chemische groep | 元素の族 | Gruppene i periodesystemet | Grupo (Química) | Grupele tabelului periodic | Skupina periodnega sistema | Golongan tabel periodik | Ryhmä (jaksollinen järjestelmä) | Periodiska systemets grupper | หมู่ในตารางธาตุ | 族 (化学)
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"Periodic table group".
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