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Timeline on periodic table
Category:
Andere
Wurde aktualisiert:
14 Jan 2019
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341
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oliver revis
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Ereignisse
Antoine Lavoisier defined an element as a substance that cannot be broken down into a simpler substance, by a chemical reactioin. Lavoisier started to classify the elements: oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, phosphorous, mercury, zinc and sulphur, into the groups of metals and non-metals.
Antoine Lavoisier
Jakob Berzelious
Jacob Berzelius is credited with identifying the chemical elements silicon, selenium, thorium, cerium, lithium and vanadium. he also developed a system of chemical notation in which the elements were given simple written labels—such as O for oxygen, or Fe for iron—with proportions noted by numbers
Johann Dobereiner
Johann Dobereiner's triads were an early attempt to sort the elements into some logical order. He also noted that some quantifiable properties of elements (e.g. atomic weight and density) in a triad followed a trend whereby the value of the middle element in the triad would be exactly or nearly predicted by taking the arithmetic mean of values for that property of the other two elements.
Alexandre-Emile Beguyer de Chancourtois
Alexandre-Emile Beguyer de Chancourtois published his classification of the elements. The resulting helical curve, which de Chancourtois called a square circle triangle, brought similar elements onto corresponding points above or belowone another on thecylinder. He was the first scientist to see the periodicity of elements when they were arranged in order of their atomic weights.
Dimitri Mendeleev
Newlands was the first person to devise a periodic table of elements arranged in order of their relative atomic masses. Continuing Johann Wolfgang Döbereiner's work with triads. It ultimately helped him publish his 'Law of Octaves', which stated that 'any given element will exhibit analogous behaviour to the eighth element following it in the table.
Henry Moseley
Henry Moseley's discovery showed that atomic numbers were not arbitrarily assigned, but rather, they have a definite physical basis. Moseley postulated that each successive element has a nuclear charge exactly one unit greater than its predecessor. Moseley redefined the idea of atomic numbers to help sort the elements into an exact sequence of ascending atomic numbers that made the Periodic Table exact.
John Newlands
Dimitri Mendeleev saw in a dream a table where all elements fell into place as required. Awakening, he immediately wrote it down on a piece of paper, only in one place did a correction later seem necessary. By adding additional elements following this pattern, Mendeleev developed his extended version of the periodic table.
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