Chemical Elements Chart History, Part 1 of 2 (History of the Chemical Elements Table)
The Periodic Table of Chemical Elements Originated about 200 Years Ago!
“The first periodic table was developed by Russsian chemist, Dimitri Ivanovich Mendeleev, in February, 1869.
—Eric R. Scerri, in Scientific American, September, 1998
The periodic table of the elements is one of the most powerful icons in science: a single document that consolidates much of our knowledge of chemistry.
- A version hangs on the wall of nearly every chemical
laboratory and lecture hall in the world.
- Indeed, nothing quite like it exists
in the other disciplines of science.
- The story of the periodic system for
classifying the elements can be traced
back over 200 years.
The periodic table of the elements is one of the most powerful icons in science: a single document that consolidates much of our knowledge of chemistry.
- Throughout its long history, the periodic table has been
disputed, altered, and improved as science
has progressed and as new elements
have been discovered.
- Despite the dramatic changes that
have taken place in science over the past
century; namely, the development of
the theories of relativity and quantum
mechanics, there has been no revolution
in the basic nature of the periodic system.
- In some instances, new findings initially
appeared to call into question the theoretical
foundations of the periodic table,
but each time scientists eventually
managed to incorporate the results
while preserving the table's fundamental
structure.
- The term "periodic" reflects the fact
that the elements show patterns in their
chemical properties in certain regular
intervals.
- Were it not for the simplification
provided by this chemical-elements chart, students of
chemistry would need to learn the properties
of all 112 known elements.
- Fortunately, the periodic table allows chemists
to function by mastering the properties
of a handful of typical elements; all the others fall into so-called groups or families with similar chemical properties.
- Historians usually consider one
event as marking the formal birth of the
modern periodic table: on February 17,
1869, a Russian professor of chemistry,
Dimitri Ivanovich Mendeleev, completed
the first of his numerous periodic
charts.
- It included 63 known elements
arranged according to increasing atomic
weight; Mendeleev also left spaces
for as yet undiscovered elements for
which he predicted atomic weights.
- Prior to Mendeleev's discovery, however,
other scientists had been actively
developing some kind of organizing system
to describe the elements.
- In 1787, for example, French chemist Antoine
Lavoisier, working with Antoine Fourcroy,
Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau
and Claude-Louis Berthollet, devised
a list of the thirty-three elements known at
the time.
- The power of the modern table lies in its two, or
even three, dimensional display of all
the known elements (and even the ones
yet to be discovered) in a logical system
of precisely ordered rows and columns.
- In an early attempt to organize the
elements into a meaningful array, German
chemist Johann Döbereiner pointed
out in 1817 that many of the known
elements could be arranged by their
similarities into groups of three, which
he called triads.
- Döbereiner singled out
triads of the elements lithium, sodium,
and potassium as well as chlorine, bromine
and iodine.
- He noticed that if the
three members of a triad were ordered
according to their atomic weights, the
properties of the middle element fell in
between those of the first and third elements.
- For example, lithium, sodium
and potassium all react vigorously with
water; but lithium, the lightest of the
triad, reacts more mildly than the other
two, whereas the heaviest of the three,
potassium, explodes violently.
- In 1857, French chemist Jean-Baptiste-André Dumas turned away from
the idea of triads and focused instead
on devising a set of mathematical equations
that could account for the increase
in atomic weight among several groups
of chemically similar elements.
- As chemists now recognize, any attempt to
establish an organizing pattern based
on an element's atomic weight will not
succeed, because atomic weight is not
the fundamental property that characterizes each of the elements.
Periodic Properties
- The crucial characteristic of Mendeleev's
system was that it illustrated
a periodicity, or repetition, in the properties
of the elements at certain regular
intervals.
- This feature had been observed
previously in an arrangement of
elements by atomic weight devised in
1862 by French geologist Alexandre-Emile Béguyer de Chancourtois.
- The system relied on a fairly intricate geometric
configuration: de Chancourtois positioned the elements according to increasing atomic weight along a spiral
inscribed on the surface of a cylinder and inclined at forty-five degrees from the base.
The knowledge in this article is applicable to the Chemical Elements List where you will find considerable information about their histories and other facts.
Chemical-Elements Chart History, Part 2 of 2, continues here.
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