The genius of Mendeleevs periodic table Lou Serico

Translator: tom carter
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

The periodic table is instantly recognizable.

It’s not just in every chemistry lab worldwide,

it’s found on t-shirts, coffee mugs, and shower curtains.

But the periodic table isn’t just another trendy icon.

It’s a massive slab of human genius,

up there with the Taj Mahal, the Mona Lisa, and the ice cream sandwich –

and the table’s creator, Dmitri Mendeleev, is a bonafide science hall-of-famer.

But why? What’s so great about him and his table?

Is it because he made a comprehensive list of the known elements?

Nah, you don’t earn a spot in science Valhalla just for making a list.

Besides, Mendeleev was far from the first person to do that.

Is it because Mendeleev arranged elements with similar properties together?

Not really, that had already been done too.

So what was Mendeleev’s genius?

Let’s look at one of the first versions of the periodic table from around 1870.

Here we see elements designated by their two-letter symbols arranged in a table.

Check out the entry of the third column, fifth row.

There’s a dash there.

From that unassuming placeholder springs the raw brilliance of Mendeleev.

That dash is science.

By putting that dash there, Dmitri was making a bold statement.

He said – and I’m paraphrasing here –

Y’all haven’t discovered this element yet. In the meantime, I’m going to give it a name.

It’s one step away from aluminum, so we’ll call it eka-aluminum,

“eka” being Sanskrit for one.

Nobody’s found eka-aluminum yet, so we don’t know anything about it, right?

Wrong! Based on where it’s located, I can tell you all about it.

First of all, an atom of eka-aluminum has an atomic weight of 68,

about 68 times heavier than a hydrogen atom.

When eka-aluminum is isolated, you’ll see it’s a solid metal at room temperature.

It’s shiny, it conducts heat really well,

it can be flattened into a sheet, stretched into a wire,

but its melting point is low. Like, freakishly low.

Oh, and a cubic centimeter of it will weigh six grams.

Mendeleev could predict all of these things simply from where the blank spot was,

and his understanding of how the elements surrounding it behave.

A few years after this prediction,

a French guy named Paul Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran

discovered a new element in ore samples

and named it gallium after Gaul, the historical name for France.

Gallium is one step away from aluminum on the periodic table.

It’s eka-aluminum. So were Mendeleev’s predictions right?

Gallium’s atomic weight is 69.72.

A cubic centimeter of it weighs 5.9 grams.

it’s a solid metal at room temperature,

but it melts at a paltry 30 degrees Celcius,

85 degrees Fahrenheit.

It melts in your mouth and in your hand.

Not only did Mendeleev completely nail gallium,

he predicted other elements that were unknown at the time:

scandium, germanium, rhenium.

The element he called eka-manganese is now called technetium.

Technetium is so rare it couldn’t be isolated until it was synthesized in a cyclotron in 1937,

almost 70 years after Dmitri predicted its existence,

30 years after he died.

Dmitri died without a Nobel Prize in 1907, but he wound up receiving a much more exclusive honor.

In 1955, scientists at UC Berkeley successfully created 17 atoms of a previously undiscovered element.

This element filled an empty spot in the perodic table at number 101,

and was officially named Mendelevium in 1963.

There have been well over 800 Nobel Prize winners,

but only 15 scientists have an element named after them.

So the next time you stare at a periodic table,

whether it’s on the wall of a university classroom or on a five-dollar coffee mug,

Dmitri Mendeleev, the architect of the periodic table,

will be staring back.

译者:tom carter
审稿人:

Bedirhan Cinar 元素周期表一目了然。

它不仅存在于世界各地的每个化学实验室,

还存在于 T 恤、咖啡杯和浴帘上。

但元素周期表不仅仅是另一个时尚图标。

这是一大块人类天才,

上面有泰姬陵、蒙娜丽莎和冰淇淋三明治——

而这张桌子的创造者德米特里·门捷列夫是一位真正的科学名人堂成员。

但为什么? 他和他的桌子有什么了不起的?

是不是因为他把已知元素列了一个全面的清单?

不,您不会仅仅因为列出清单而在科学瓦尔哈拉中获得一席之地。

此外,门捷列夫远非第一个这样做的人。

是因为门捷列夫把具有相似性质的元素排列在一起吗?

不是真的,那也已经完成了。

那么门捷列夫的天才是什么?

让我们看一下 1870 年左右的元素周期表的第一个版本。

在这里,我们看到由排列在表格中的两个字母符号指定的元素。

查看第三列第五行的条目。

那里有一个破折号。

从那个不起眼的占位符中涌现出门捷列夫的原始光辉。

那个破折号就是科学。

通过把那个破折号放在那里,德米特里做出了一个大胆的声明。

他说——我在这里解释一下——

你们还没有发现这个元素。 与此同时,我要给它一个名字。

它离铝只有一步之遥,所以我们称它为 eka-aluminum,

“eka”是梵文的意思。

还没有人发现 eka-aluminum,所以我们对此一无所知,对吧?

错误的! 根据它的位置,我可以告诉你一切。

首先,eka-铝原子的原子量为 68,

比氢原子重约 68 倍。

当 eka 铝被隔离时,你会发现它在室温下是一种固体金属。

它有光泽,导热性很好

,可以压扁成薄片,拉长成金属丝,

但它的熔点很低。 比如,低得离谱。

哦,一立方厘米重六克。

门捷列夫可以简单地根据空白点的位置

以及他对周围元素行为方式的理解来预测所有这些事情。

这一预测几年后,

一个名叫保罗·埃米尔·勒科克·德·布瓦德兰的法国人

在矿石样本中发现了一种新元素,

并以法国的历史名称高卢的名字将其命名为镓。

镓离元素周期表上的铝只有一步之遥。

它是 eka 铝。 那么门捷列夫的预测对吗?

镓的原子量为 69.72。

一立方厘米重5.9克。

它在室温下是固体金属,

但在 30 摄氏度、

85 华氏度的温度下会熔化。

它会在你的嘴里和手中融化。

门捷列夫不仅完全确定了镓,

他还预言了当时未知的其他元素:

钪、锗、铼。

他称之为eka-manganese的元素现在被称为锝。

锝非常稀有,直到 1937 年在回旋加速器中合成时才被分离出来,此时

距德米特里预测它的存在已近 70 年,也就是

他去世 30 年后。

德米特里于 1907 年去世,没有获得诺贝尔奖,但他最终获得了更为独特的荣誉。

1955 年,加州大学伯克利分校的科学家成功地创造了 17 个原子,这是一种以前未被发现的元素。

该元素填补了元素周期表中第 101 位的空白位置,

并于 1963 年正式命名为 Mendelevium。

诺贝尔奖获得者已超过 800 位,

但只有 15 位科学家拥有以他们命名的元素。

所以下次你盯着元素周期表看时,

无论是在大学教室的墙上还是在 5 美元的咖啡杯上

,元素周期表的建筑师德米特里·门捷列夫

都会回头看。