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Chemistry: 5.1 History of the Periodic Table 120 Views


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Description:

Periodically throughout your life, you're going to have to learn about the periodic table. Today's lesson about history and nothing but history. Period.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

When it comes to learning about the origins of the periodic table...

00:08

...there's just one thing you need to remember.

00:10

The three M's.

00:12

John Mewlands, Dmitri Mendeleev, and Henry Moseley.

00:17

Okay, it's actually John Newlands. But two N's and an M is an awful mnemonic device.

00:23

So let's start with John Newlands.

00:26

Oh, suck it up John. Your achievements are the important thing here.

00:29

A few years before the period table was compiled...

00:32

Newlands noticed that there was something special about the number seven.

00:36

And no, he wasn't a big gambler.

00:39

He realized that there were some uncanny similarities between certain elements.

00:43

All of which had atomic weights that differed by seven.

00:47

He organized the elements using what he called the Law of Octaves.

00:50

Because the way he sorted them looked a bit like octaves of music.

00:53

But it didn't sound nearly as pretty. Even when Newlands would attempt to sing about it in the shower.

01:00

It wasn't until 1869 that Dmitri Mendeleev...

01:02

Oh come on John, your part of the story's over now. Move on.

01:09

It wasn't until 1869 that Mendeleev was playing around with an organization of the elements himself.

01:14

He discovered that when you order them by increasing atomic weight, a pattern seemed to emerge.

01:20

It was always a reactive non-metal, then a very reactive light metal, then a less reactive light metal, and so on.

01:27

He plugged everything into the format we see today.

01:30

Although, not before experimenting with having all like elements in rows, rather than columns.

01:35

Excel spreadsheets probably would have tortured this guy.

01:38

Perhaps the best thing Mendeleev did was to leave spaces for undiscovered elements.

01:44

He'd figure out where there was a missing link and he didn't attempt to stuff something in there that didn't belong.

01:50

By recognizing roughly what should belong in those empty slots...

01:53

Mendeleev was actually able to predict the properties of some of those elements.

01:59

We bet Mr. Newlands would have been awfully jealous.

02:04

Okay, let's wrap this thing up.

02:06

The other big contributor to the periodic table was Henry Moseley.

02:10

Mendeleev still had a couple of question marks on his period table...

02:14

...and it was Moseley who was able to turn those question marks into exclamation points.

02:19

...Well, figuratively speaking.

02:21

After using an X-ray gun to measure the wavelengths, or X-rays...

02:25

Moseley performed a few nifty calculations and concluded that...

02:30

...there was an exact correlation between frequency and atomic number.

02:34

So the few spots that had given Mendeleev a headache finally had an answer.

02:39

Moseley had found the reason why organizing the elements by atomic number...

02:43

...didn't always work out exactly the same as organizing them by atomic mass.

02:46

Even though the modern periodic table is organized by atomic number...because it's pretty darn close.

02:52

Unfortunately, Mendeleev was dead by the time Moseley made his big breakthrough,

02:56

so he never got news of the discovery.

02:59

Huh, you have a really hard time letting things go, don't you there?

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