Math, asked by premcr7, 6 months ago

how did Mandeléev use the criteria of reaction with hydrogen and oxygen to place elements in his periodic table?? ,,,, ​

Answers

Answered by priyanshisinha216
1

Step-by-step explanation:

Dmitrii Mendeleev (1834-1907; see portrait of Mendeleev in 1878 by Kramskoy) was born in Tobolsk, in Western Siberia. His chief contribution to chemistry was the establishment of the periodic system of elements. Mendeleev was one of a number of independent discoverers of the periodic law in the 1860s--that number ranging from one [Leicester 1948] to six [van Spronsen 1969] depending on the criteria one adopts. Mendeleev's formulation was clearly superior in several respects to the work of contemporary classifiers: it was the clearest, most consistent, and most systematic formulation, and Mendeleev made several testable predictions based on it. It was not, however, free from error. Scientists, even great scientists, trying to see further than others have in the past, do not always see the whole picture clearly. As noted below, Mendeleev himself corrected some of the errors within a few years; others persisted well into the 20th century.

This table and the accompanying observations were first presented to the Russian Chemical Society in March 1869. (Actually, Mendeleev was ill, and his colleague Nikolai Menshutkin presented his paper [Menschutkin 1934].) The paper was published in the first volume of the new society's journal. That same year, a German abstract of the paper, consisting of the table and eight comments, was published in Zeitschrift für Chemie. The German abstract was the vehicle by which Mendeleev's ideas reached chemists working in Western Europe. An English translation of that German abstract is presented here. View a manuscript draft of the table.

On the Relationship of the Properties of the Elements to their Atomic Weights

D. Mendelejeff, Zeitschrift für Chemie 12, 405-406 (1869); translation by Carmen Giunta

By ordering the elements according to increasing atomic weight in vertical rows so that the horizontal rows contain analogous elements,[1] still ordered by increasing atomic weight, one obtains the following arrangement, from which a few general conclusions may be derived

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