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History of the Periodic Table
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Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

Jan 13, 2016

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Page 1: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

History of the Periodic Table

Page 2: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity• By 1860, more than 60 elements had been

discovered.• At this time there was no method for determining

an element’s atomic mass.• Communication between chemists was difficult.• In 1860, chemists formed the First International

Congress of Chemists in Germany.•During the Congress a method for calculating

atomic mass was agreed upon.

Page 3: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

•Dmitri Mendeleev decided to include the atomic masses in a chemistry textbook he was writing.•He also wanted to organize the

elements based on their properties.

•Mendeleev’s first periodic table was published in 1869.

Page 4: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

Mendeleev created a table in which elements with similar properties were grouped together – a periodic table of the elements.

Mendeleev left several empty spaces in his periodic table. In 1871, the Russian chemist boldly predicted the existence and properties of the elements that would fill three of the spaces.By 1886, all three elements had been discovered.

Page 5: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

Moseley and the Periodic Table•Henry Moseley found that elements

in the periodic table fit into patterns better when arranged in increasing order according to nuclear charge (number of protons/atomic number).

•Moseley’s work led to both the modern definition of atomic number and the recognition that atomic number, not atomic mass, is the basis for the organization of the periodic table.

Page 6: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

Periodic Law•Mendeleev’s principle of chemical periodicity is

correctly stated in what is known as the periodic law.• Periodic Law – the physical and chemical

properties of the elements are periodic functions of their atomic numbers.• In other words, when the elements are arranged

in order of increasing atomic number, elements with similar properties appear at regular intervals.

Page 7: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

Periodicity of Atomic Numbers

Page 8: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

The Modern Periodic Table• The periodic table is the arrangement of the

elements in order of their atomic numbers so that elements with similar properties fall into the same column, or group.

Page 9: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

• Perhaps the most significant addition to the periodic table came with the discovery of the noble gases.• In 1894 the

noble gas argon was discovered (Sir William Ramsay) which led to a new group being added to the table.

Page 10: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

• In the early 1900s the development of the periodic table continued with the lanthanides (cerium to lutetium).

Page 11: Mendeleev and Chemical Periodicity By 1860, more than 60 elements had been discovered. At this time there was no method for determining an element’s atomic.

• The discovery of the actinides (thorium to lawrencium) also added to the development of the periodic table.