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Group Properties in Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry (0620): Groups I, VII and 0 Explained
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Group Properties in Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry (0620): Groups I, VII and 0 Explained

Tutopiya Team Educational Expert
• 12 min read
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Who this is for: Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry (0620) students who want group properties — alkali metals, halogens and noble gases — to become structured recall instead of mixed-up reactions.
What query it owns: how to understand and revise group properties in Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry.
Why this is safe: this page owns the group properties revision-guide angle, while Tutopiya’s Group Properties subtopic page owns the learning resource and the free Group Properties quiz owns the practice.

Group properties are the characteristic behaviours of elements in the same Periodic Table column. Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry (0620) focuses on Group I (alkali metals), Group VII (halogens) and Group 0 (noble gases) — their appearance, reactions with water or halogens, and the compounds they form. This guide organises each group’s facts, the displacement patterns examiners love, and the wording that earns full marks.

Key takeaways

  • Group I metals (Li, Na, K) are soft, low-density metals that react vigorously with water to form alkalis and hydrogen.
  • Group VII halogens (Cl₂, Br₂, I₂) are diatomic non-metals; more reactive halogens displace less reactive ones from solutions.
  • Group 0 noble gases are monatomic and unreactive because they have a full outer shell.
  • Group I form +1 ions; Group VII form −1 ions (as halide ions).
  • Test halogens with damp litmus or displacement reactions — know the colour changes.

What are group properties in Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry?

Group properties are the shared physical and chemical features of elements in the same vertical column of the Periodic Table. In Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry, you must describe Group I reactions with water and oxygen, halogen displacement and colours, and explain noble-gas unreactivity. Similarity arises because group members have the same number of outer-shell electrons.

Read the full notes on Tutopiya’s Group Properties subtopic page before attempting questions.

The core groups you must master

GroupKey elementsProperties / reactionsExam focus
Group ILi, Na, KSoft, float on water, react to form MOH + H₂Reactivity increases down group
Group VIICl₂, Br₂, I₂Coloured diatomic gases/liquids/solidsDisplacement, bleaching damp litmus
Group 0He, Ne, ArMonatomic, unreactiveFull outer shell explanation

How to tackle group property questions — step by step

  1. Identify the group from the element name or position.
  2. Recall the outer electron pattern — 1 for Group I, 7 for Group VII, full shell for Group 0.
  3. Write the balanced equation if a reaction is asked (e.g. sodium + water).
  4. For halogen displacement, place halogens in reactivity order: F > Cl > Br > I.
  5. State observations — colour, effervescence, litmus change — before explaining why.

Test yourself with the free Group Properties quiz.

Group I vs Group VII: which pattern does the question want?

SituationWhat to applyTypical signal words
Reaction with waterGroup I → metal hydroxide + hydrogen”sodium in water”, “effervescence”
DisplacementMore reactive halogen displaces less reactive halide”chlorine with potassium bromide solution”
UnreactivityGroup 0 → full outer shell”why neon does not react”
Colour / stateHalogens at room temperature”colour of bromine”, “state of chlorine”

Group properties in past-paper wording: command words that matter

Command word / phraseWhat the question wantsTypical group stem
DescribeObservations from a reaction”Describe what is seen when sodium reacts with water.”
Write a balanced equationFull chemical equation”Write an equation for potassium reacting with water.”
ExplainElectronic or reactivity reason”Explain why the reactivity of Group I increases down the group.”
PredictDisplacement outcome”Predict what happens when chlorine is added to potassium iodide solution.”

Worked exam-style stems (how to answer the wording)

  1. “Describe what is seen when a small piece of sodium is placed in water.” Melts, moves on surface, fizzes, hydrogen ignites with a flame; solution turns alkaline (pH > 7). Reward: observation list, not just “reacts”.
  2. “Chlorine water is added to potassium bromide solution. State what happens.” Orange/brown colour of bromine appears — chlorine displaces bromine. Reward: colour change + displacement named.
  3. “Explain why the noble gases are unreactive.” They have a full outer electron shell — no tendency to lose, gain or share electrons. Reward: full outer shell stated clearly.

When you can recognise the wording instantly, work through the Group Properties quiz and Periodic Trends.

How group properties connect to the rest of the course

Group chemistry links to Periodic Trends, Noble Gases, ionic bonding and Redox. The Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry resource hub keeps all units together.

Common mistakes students make

  • Writing Group VII elements as single atoms in equations — they are diatomic (Cl₂, Br₂, I₂).
  • Reversing halogen displacement — less reactive cannot displace more reactive.
  • Describing Group I reaction with water without mentioning hydrogen or alkaline solution.
  • Saying noble gases have no outer electrons — they have a full outer shell.
  • Confusing chloride (ion) with chlorine (element).

When you need more support

If displacement or Group I equation questions keep failing, work through the Group Properties quiz, then get focused help from a Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry tutor.

Frequently asked questions

Which groups are most tested in IGCSE Chemistry? Groups I, VII and 0 appear most often — reactions, displacement and unreactivity explanations.

What is the halogen reactivity order? Fluorine > chlorine > bromine > iodine (most to least reactive).

Why do alkali metals store under oil? To prevent reaction with oxygen and moisture in the air.

How do I revise group properties effectively? Learn one group at a time with equations and observations, then take the Group Properties quiz before mixing displacement and Group I questions.

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