Science, asked by sandeepsoren85, 7 days ago

Make a comparison between Dobereiner’s model and that later published by Newlands

Answers

Answered by bhakti4616
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Explanation:

In music, there are triads and octaves. A triad is a chord consisting of three notes, each three notes apart on the musical scale. An octave is the same note, but a different pitch, for example, low C, middle C, and high C. In the 1800s, two scientists came up the chemistry versions of triads and octaves, but they don't have anything to do with musical notes. What's similar to the musical version is the spaces between the elements involved in triads and octaves. Let's look at the chemistry versions of triads and octaves.

Johann Wolfgang Dobereiner was a chemist in the early 1800s, when the periodic table wasn't in existence, and some chemists were trying to find a type of organizational system for the known elements. Dobereiner noticed a pattern with certain elements that had similar chemical and physical properties. He called these elements triads and, thus, we have Dobereiner's Law of Triads. If you put these elements in order of their atomic masses, the average of the molar mass of the first and third elements in the triad is the molar mass of the second element. Let's look at an example.

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