Which Elements Belong in Group 3 of the Periodic Table?
The question of precisely which elements should be placed in group 3 of the periodic table has been debated from time to time, with apparently no resolution up to this point. [1] This question has also received a recent impetus from several science news reports following an article in Nature in which the measurement of the ionization energy of the element lawrencium was reported for the first time. [2,3]
We believe that this question is of considerable importance for chemists and physicists, as well as students of the subjects. Students and instructors are typically puzzled by the fact that published periodic tables show variation in the way that group 3 of the periodic table is displayed. An IUPAC task group has now been formed in order to make a recommendation regarding the membership of group 3 of the periodic table.
Various forms of evidence have been put forward in support of each version of group 3, appealing to chemical as well as physical properties, spectral characteristics of the elements, and criteria concerning the electronic configurations of their atoms. The task group will aim to evaluate all this evidence in order to reach a conclusion that encompasses these different approaches. [4]
It is proposed that IUPAC should make an official recommendation in favor of the composition of group 3 of the periodic table as consisting either of
(1) the elements Sc, Y, Lu and Lr, or
(2) the elements Sc, Y, La and Ac.
It should be stated categorically that the task group does not intend to recommend the use of a 32-column periodic table or an 18-column. This choice is a matter of convention, rather than a scientific one, and should be left to individual authors and educators. As Jeffery Leigh has asserted recently, IUPAC has not traditionally taken a view as to the correctness of one or the other periodic table and there is no such thing as an officially approved IUPAC periodic table. [5] We will only concern ourselves with the constitution of group 3. Once this is established, one is free to represent the periodic table in an 18 or 32 column format. The conclusions of the task force will form the basis for a report to appear in Pure and Applied Chemistry.

Long-form table displaying two options or composition of group 3 of the periodic table as consisting either of (1, top) the elements Sc, Y, Lu and Lr, or (2, bottom) the elements Sc, Y, La and Ac. Reproduced from CI July-Aug 2012, p. 30
The task group welcomes comments on this project.
For more information, contact the Task Group Chair Eric Scerri <scerri@chem.ucla.edu>
References
1. R.W. Clark, G.D. White, J. Chem. Educ., 85:497, 2008; W.B. Jensen, J. Chem. Educ., 59:634-636, 1982; L. Lavelle, J. Chem. Educ., 85:1482–1483, 2008; E.R., Scerri, J. Chem. Educ., 86:1188-1188, 2009; W.B. Jensen, J. Chem. Educ., 85:1491, 2008; E.R. Scerri, Chem. Int., 34(4):28-31, 2012, www.iupac.org/publications/ci/2012/3404/ud.html; E. Scerri, A Very Short Introduction to the Periodic Table, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2013; W.B. Jensen, Foundations of Chemistry, 17:23-31, 2015. Search in Google Scholar
2. T. K. Sato et al, Measurement of the First Ionization Potential of Lawrencium, Element 103, Nature,520:209-212, 2015.10.1038/nature14342Search in Google Scholar PubMed
3. D. Castelvecchi, Exotic Atom Struggles to Find Its Place in the Periodic Table, Nature, 2015, (8 April), doi:10.1038/nature.2015.17275 ; J. Kemsley, Lawrencium Ionization Energy Measured, Chem. & Eng. News, 93:8, 2015; M. Gunther, Lawrencium Experiment Could Shake Up the Periodic Table, Chemistry World, 9 April 2015, www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/2015/04/lawrencium-exeriment-could-shake-periodic-table ; R. Gray, Is the Periodic Table Wrong? Elements May Need to be Reordered After Scientists Find Lawrencium Looks Out of Place, Daily Mail, 2015, 10 April, www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3033570/Is-periodic-table-WRONG-Elements-need-reordered-scientists-Lawrencium-looks-place.htmlSearch in Google Scholar
4. L.D. Landau, E.M. Lifshitz, E.M., Quantum Mechanics, Pergamon, London, 1959, p. 245 footnote; W. F. Luder, J. Chem. Educ., 20, 21, 1943; D.C. Hamilton, M.A. Jensen, Phys. Rev. Letters, 11:205, 1963; B.T. Matthias, W.H. Zacharisen, G.W. Webb, J.J. Englehardt, Phys. Rev. Letters,18:781, 1967; V.M. Christyakov, Zh. Obshch. Khim.,38(2):209, 1968.Search in Google Scholar
5. J. Leigh, Chem. Int., 31(1):4-6, 2009. www.iupac.org/publications/ci/2009/3101/1_leigh.htmlSearch in Google Scholar
©2016 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead - Full issue pdf
- Guest Editorial
- Outer Limits: Pushing the Extremities
- Contents
- Officer’s Column
- Secretary General’s Column
- Features
- The Three-letter Element Symbols:
- Procedures for the Naming of a New Element
- The Chemical Structure Association Trust
- IUPAC Wire
- Discovery and Assignment of Elements with Atomic Numbers 113, 115, 117 and 118
- Open Data in a Big Data World
- UN Secretary General Appoints ICSU Executive Director to Special Advisory Group on the SDGs
- Project Place
- Company Associates Reengineering Project
- Postgraduate Course in Polymer Science, Prague, Czech Republic
- Critically Evaluated ESR (EPR) Spectra of Important Polymerization-related Radicals
- Which Elements Belong in Group 3 of the Periodic Table?
- Making an imPACt
- Discovery of the elements with atomic numbers Z = 113, 115 and 117 (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Discovery of the element with atomic number Z = 118 completing the 7th row of the periodic table (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Glossary of terms used in computational drug design, part II (IUPAC Recommendations)
- Standard electrode potentials involving radicals in aqueous solution: inorganic radicals (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Maritime pollutants in shipping and commercial European ports based on relevant physical and biogeochemical environmental parameters (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Latest Updates from PAC Conferences & More—Brief
- IUPAC Provisional Recommendations
- Glossary of Terms Used in Developmental and Reproductive Toxicology
- How to Name Atoms in Phosphates, Polyphosphates, their Analogues, and Transition State Analogues for Enzyme-catalysed Phosphoryl Transfer Reactions
- Comprehensive Definition of Oxidation State
- Stamps International
- Berzelius and the Chemical Alphabet
- Conference Call
- Latin American Pesticide Residue Workshop—Food and Environment
- Ecological Risk Assessment
- Where 2B & Y
- New Chemistries for Phytomedicines and Crop Protection Chemicals
- Function Through Disorder: Intrinsically Disordered Proteins in Biology and Medicine
- Phosphorus Chemistry
- Self-assembly in the World of Polymers
- Solubility Phenomena
- Blood-Biomaterial Interactions
- CODATA-RDA School of Research Data Science
- 28th National [Turkish] Chemistry Congress with International Participation
- The Power of Norms
- Selenium Research (Se2017)
- Mark Your Calendar