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===Period 1=== {{Main|Period 1 element}} Although the modern periodic table is standard today, the placement of the period 1 elements hydrogen and helium remains an open issue under discussion, and some variation can be found.<ref name=KW/><ref name="Lemonick">{{cite web |url=https://cen.acs.org/physical-chemistry/periodic-table/periodic-table-icon-chemists-still/97/i1 |title=The periodic table is an icon. But chemists still can't agree on how to arrange it |last=Lemonick |first=Sam |date=2019 |website=C&EN News |access-date=16 December 2020 |archive-date=28 January 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210128031450/https://cen.acs.org/physical-chemistry/periodic-table/periodic-table-icon-chemists-still/97/i1 |url-status=live }}</ref> Following their respective s<sup>1</sup> and s<sup>2</sup> electron configurations, hydrogen would be placed in group 1, and helium would be placed in group 2.<ref name="KW" /> The group 1 placement of hydrogen is common, but helium is almost always placed in group 18 with the other noble gases.<ref name="IUPAC-redbook" /> The debate has to do with conflicting understandings of the extent to which chemical or electronic properties should decide periodic table placement.<ref name=Lemonick/> Like the group 1 metals, hydrogen has one electron in its outermost shell<ref name="Gray12">Gray, p. 12</ref> and typically loses its only electron in chemical reactions.<ref name="Vlasov" /> Hydrogen has some metal-like chemical properties, being able to displace some metals from their [[salt (chemistry)|salts]].<ref name="Vlasov">{{cite book |last1=Vlasov |first1=L. |last2=Trifonov |first2=D. |translator-last1=Sobolev |translator-first1=D. |date=1970 |title=107 Stories About Chemistry |publisher=Mir Publishers |pages=23β27 |isbn=978-0-8285-5067-3}}</ref> But it forms a diatomic nonmetallic gas at standard conditions, unlike the alkali metals which are reactive solid metals. This and hydrogen's formation of [[hydride]]s, in which it gains an electron, brings it close to the properties of the [[halogen]]s which do the same<ref name=Vlasov/> (though it is rarer for hydrogen to form H<sup>β</sup> than H<sup>+</sup>).<ref name="raynercanham">{{cite book |last=Rayner-Canham |first=Geoffrey |date=2020 |title=The Periodic Table: Past, Present, Future |publisher=World Scientific |pages=53β70, 85β102 |isbn=978-981-12-1850-7}}</ref> Moreover, the lightest two halogens ([[fluorine]] and [[chlorine]]) are gaseous like hydrogen at standard conditions.<ref name="Vlasov" /> Some properties of hydrogen are not a good fit for either group: hydrogen is neither highly oxidizing nor highly reducing and is not reactive with water.<ref name=raynercanham/> Hydrogen thus has properties corresponding to both those of the alkali metals and the halogens, but matches neither group perfectly, and is thus difficult to place by its chemistry.<ref name="Vlasov" /> Therefore, while the electronic placement of hydrogen in group 1 predominates, some rarer arrangements show either hydrogen in group 17,<ref>{{Clayden}}</ref> duplicate hydrogen in both groups 1 and 17,<ref>{{cite journal |last=Seaborg |first= G.|title=The chemical and radioactive properties of the heavy elements |journal= Chemical & Engineering News|year=1945 |volume=23 |issue=23 |pages=2190β93|doi= 10.1021/cen-v023n023.p2190}}</ref><ref name="Kaesz" /> or float it separately from all groups.<ref name="Kaesz">{{cite journal |last1=Kaesz |first1=Herb |last2=Atkins |first2=Peter |date=2009 |title=A Central Position for Hydrogen in the Periodic Table |journal=Chemistry International |volume=25 |issue=6 |page=14 |doi=10.1515/ci.2003.25.6.14 |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name="GE">Greenwood & Earnshaw, throughout the book</ref><ref name="KW" /> This last option has nonetheless been criticized by the chemist and philosopher of science [[Eric Scerri]] on the grounds that it appears to imply that hydrogen is above the periodic law altogether, unlike all the other elements.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Scerri |first1=Eric |date=2004 |title=The Placement of Hydrogen in the Periodic Table |url=http://publications.iupac.org/ci/2004/2603/ud2_scerri.html |journal=Chemistry International |volume=26 |issue=3 |pages=21β22 |doi=10.1515/ci.2004.26.3.21 |access-date=1 January 2023|doi-access=free |url-access=subscription }}</ref> Helium is the only element that routinely occupies a position in the periodic table that is not consistent with its electronic structure. It has two electrons in its outermost shell, whereas the other noble gases have eight; and it is an s-block element, whereas all other noble gases are p-block elements. However it is unreactive at standard conditions, and has a full outer shell: these properties are like the noble gases in group 18, but not at all like the reactive alkaline earth metals of group 2. For these reasons helium is nearly universally placed in group 18<ref name="IUPAC-redbook" /> which its properties best match;<ref name="KW" /> a proposal to move helium to group 2 was rejected by IUPAC in 1988 for these reasons.<ref name=Fluck/> Nonetheless, helium is still occasionally placed in group 2 today,<ref name=shattered>{{cite book |last1=Thyssen |first1=Pieter |last2=Ceulemans |first2=Arnout |date=2017 |title=Shattered Symmetry: Group Theory from the Eightfold Way to the Periodic Table |url= |location= |publisher=Oxford University Press |pages=336, 360β381 |isbn=978-0-19-061139-2}}</ref> and some of its physical and chemical properties are closer to the group 2 elements and support the electronic placement.<ref name="Gray12" /><ref name="KW">{{cite book |last1=Keeler |first1=James |last2=Wothers |first2=Peter |date=2014 |title=Chemical Structure and Reactivity |url= |edition=2nd |location= |publisher=Oxford University Press |pages=257β260 |isbn=978-0-19-9604135}}</ref> Solid helium crystallises in a [[hexagonal close-packed]] structure, which matches beryllium and magnesium in group 2, but not the other noble gases in group 18.<ref name=Kurushkin>{{cite journal |last1=Kurushkin |first1=Mikhail |date=2020 |title=Helium's placement in the Periodic Table from a crystal structure viewpoint |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/342152661 |journal=IUCrJ |volume=7 |issue=4 |pages=577β578 |doi=10.1107/S2052252520007769 |pmid=32695406 |pmc=7340260 |access-date=19 June 2020 |doi-access=free |bibcode=2020IUCrJ...7..577K |archive-date=19 October 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211019202250/https://www.researchgate.net/publication/342152661_Helium's_placement_in_the_Periodic_Table_from_a_crystal_structure_viewpoint |url-status=live }}</ref> Recent theoretical developments in noble gas chemistry, in which helium is expected to show slightly less inertness than neon and to form (HeO)(LiF)<sub>2</sub> with a structure similar to the analogous beryllium compound (but with no expected neon analogue), have resulted in more chemists advocating a placement of helium in group 2. This relates to the electronic argument, as the reason for neon's greater inertness is repulsion from its filled p-shell that helium lacks, though realistically it is unlikely that helium-containing molecules will be stable outside extreme low-temperature conditions (around 10 [[kelvin|K]]).<ref name="PTSS" /><ref name=grochala>{{cite journal |last1=Grochala |first1=Wojciech |date=1 November 2017 |title=On the position of helium and neon in the Periodic Table of Elements |journal=Foundations of Chemistry |volume=20 |pages=191β207 |issue=2018 |doi=10.1007/s10698-017-9302-7 |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bent Weberg |first1=Libby |date=18 January 2019 |title="The" periodic table |url=https://cen.acs.org/articles/97/i3/Reactions.html |journal=Chemical & Engineering News |volume=97 |issue=3 |access-date=27 March 2020 |archive-date=1 February 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200201200009/https://cen.acs.org/articles/97/i3/Reactions.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Grandinetti |first1=Felice |date=23 April 2013 |title=Neon behind the signs |journal=Nature Chemistry |volume=5 |issue=2013 |page=438 |doi=10.1038/nchem.1631 |pmid=23609097 |bibcode=2013NatCh...5..438G |doi-access=free }}</ref> The [[Nonmetal (chemistry)#First row anomaly|first-row anomaly]] in the periodic table has additionally been cited to support moving helium to group 2. It arises because the first orbital of any type is unusually small, since unlike its higher analogues, it does not experience interelectronic repulsion from a smaller orbital of the same type. This makes the first row of elements in each block unusually small, and such elements tend to exhibit characteristic kinds of anomalies for their group. Some chemists arguing for the repositioning of helium have pointed out that helium exhibits these anomalies if it is placed in group 2, but not if it is placed in group 18: on the other hand, neon, which would be the first group 18 element if helium was removed from that spot, does exhibit those anomalies.<ref name="PTSS" /> The relationship between helium and beryllium is then argued to resemble that between hydrogen and lithium, a placement which is much more commonly accepted.<ref name=grochala/> For example, because of this trend in the sizes of orbitals, a large difference in atomic radii between the first and second members of each main group is seen in groups 1 and 13β17: it exists between neon and argon, and between helium and beryllium, but not between helium and neon. This similarly affects the noble gases' boiling points and solubilities in water, where helium is too close to neon, and the large difference characteristic between the first two elements of a group appears only between neon and argon. Moving helium to group 2 makes this trend consistent in groups 2 and 18 as well, by making helium the first group 2 element and neon the first group 18 element: both exhibit the characteristic properties of a [[kainosymmetric]] first element of a group.<ref name=SB23/><ref>Siekierski and Burgess, p. 128</ref> The group 18 placement of helium nonetheless remains near-universal due to its extreme inertness.<ref>{{Cite book|title = Modeling Marvels: Computational Anticipation of Novel Molecules|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=IoFzgBSSCwEC|publisher = Springer Science & Business Media|date = 5 December 2008|isbn = 978-1-4020-6973-4|first = Errol G.|last = Lewars|pages = 69β71|url-status=live|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160519021952/https://books.google.com/books?id=IoFzgBSSCwEC|archive-date = 19 May 2016|df = dmy-all}}</ref> Additionally, tables that float both hydrogen and helium outside all groups may rarely be encountered.<ref name=GE/><ref name=KW/><ref name=jensenlaw/>
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