The History of the Periodic Table of the Elements
Created | Updated Jan 28, 2002
Summary
As weidespread knowledge says, things are made out of molecules, and molecules are made out of a combination of little nice chops of matter called atoms. The vast vareity of the possible combinations (billions and billions) is only possible, because there are severeal different types of atoms (90 of them occuring naturally and some 20 artificial ones), which for historical reasons are called elements. It was not until the 1850s that scientists decided to take a closer look at the elements, their properties and their chemistry. By that time about 60 elements were known and the few known properties allowed only a loose ordering of the elements. It was in 1869, that a russian fellow named Dmitri I. Mendeleev came up with the decisive idea of how to sort the elements in a more logical way. His work finally led to the development of the periodic table of the elements, as it is known today.
Mendeleev's Idea
By 1869, Mendeleev had assembled all avbailiable descriptions of the known elements (about 60) and presented his results to the Russian Chemical Society. The publication of his work The Dependence Between the Properties of the Atomic Weights of the Elements marked the hey-day for element-researchers all over the world. The apparently weird ordering of elements according to their properties and their atomic weight led to a series of conclusions. First, that certain properties occur periodically (hence the name). And that certain places in the table had to be left blank, for undiscovered elements. The properties of those undiscovered elements (the most prominent was to be Gallium) and of its compounds could be predicted long before they were discovered. The discovery of Gallium in 1875, and the good agreement of the predictions with the actual properties demonstrated the power of Mendeleev's table. The science-community of that time went ga-ga about that russian scientist and his table, and today people still think this table is an extremely groovy piece of science. (See Mendeleev's table here -- www-site)
Further developments of the Table
A seriuos turmoil occurred in science in the beginnings of the 20th century. The discovery of atomic properties led to the quantum theory1 and it revolutionized the way physicists and chemists thought about matter. The periodic table of the elements was reorganized to accomodate this new ingenious theory, adopting the form it has today. The original sorting according to the molecular weight was dropped in favor of the more logical sorting according to the atomic number (which is the charge of the nucleus, or the amount of protons it is made of) and the groups were arranged according to their electronic configuration. Other minor changes were implemented, like the enumeration of the groups and periods. The periodic table of the elements is not complete (every now and then a new element is synthesized) and not in its final lay-out. It is currently being maintained by the IUPAC (www-Site; International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry )