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Classification of Elements and Periodicity in Properties MCQs with Answers – Part 3 (Class 11 Chemistry)

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211. In the periodic table, metals are found mainly on the
ⓐ. left side and central region
ⓑ. upper right corner only
ⓒ. noble-gas group only
ⓓ. line separating no elements
212. Non-metals are mainly located in the periodic table toward the
ⓐ. lower left region
ⓑ. centre of the \(d\)-block only
ⓒ. lanthanoid row only
ⓓ. upper right region
213. Metalloids are commonly found along the zig-zag boundary between metals and non-metals. A suitable example set is
ⓐ. \(\mathrm{Na}\), \(\mathrm{K}\), and \(\mathrm{Rb}\)
ⓑ. \(\mathrm{F}\), \(\mathrm{Cl}\), and \(\mathrm{Br}\)
ⓒ. \(\mathrm{B}\), \(\mathrm{Si}\), and \(\mathrm{Ge}\)
ⓓ. \(\mathrm{He}\), \(\mathrm{Ne}\), and \(\mathrm{Ar}\)
214. The table shows element-type locations. Select the row with the best description.
RowTypeUsual location
PMetalsLeft side and central region
QNon-metalsOnly in the \(f\)-block
RMetalloidsOnly in group \(1\)
SNoble gasesMostly among alkali metals
ⓐ. Row P
ⓑ. Row Q
ⓒ. Row R
ⓓ. Row S
215. Moving from left to right across a typical period, the broad change in element character is usually
ⓐ. metallic character increases continuously
ⓑ. all elements become identical in chemical behaviour
ⓒ. metallic character decreases and non-metallic character increases
ⓓ. non-metallic character disappears completely
216. A period contains a left-side metal, a middle boundary element, and an upper-right non-metal. The middle boundary element is most likely to show
ⓐ. purely alkali-metal behaviour in all compounds
ⓑ. noble-gas inertness with a full octet in every case
ⓒ. intermediate metalloid character
ⓓ. no relation to periodic trends
217. Use the arrangement described below: a diagonal zig-zag line separates a large metallic region on the left and centre from a non-metallic region toward the upper right. Elements close to this line include \(\mathrm{B}\), \(\mathrm{Si}\), \(\mathrm{Ge}\), \(\mathrm{As}\), \(\mathrm{Sb}\), and \(\mathrm{Te}\). These elements are best described as
ⓐ. alkali metals
ⓑ. metalloids
ⓒ. noble gases
ⓓ. actinoids only
218. Consider the statements about metals, non-metals, and metalloids in the periodic table. I. Metals occupy much of the left and central part of the table. II. Non-metals are concentrated mainly toward the upper right. III. Metalloids commonly lie along a zig-zag boundary. IV. All elements in the \(p\)-block are metals. The supported statements are
ⓐ. I and IV only
ⓑ. II and IV only
ⓒ. I, II, III, and IV
ⓓ. I, II, and III only
219. A claim says, “Any element on the left side of a period should be more likely to lose electrons than an element on the upper right.” This claim is generally
ⓐ. unreasonable, because left-side elements are always noble gases
ⓑ. reasonable, because metallic character is stronger toward the left
ⓒ. reasonable only for \(f\)-block elements
ⓓ. unreasonable, because periodic position never relates to chemical behaviour
220. The best summary of the metal-to-non-metal distribution in the periodic table is that
ⓐ. metals and non-metals are randomly scattered with no trend
ⓑ. metals, metalloids, and non-metals occupy regions that reflect a gradual change in properties across periods
ⓒ. every element along the zig-zag line is an alkali metal
ⓓ. all non-metals belong to the \(d\)-block
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