Chemistry, asked by hariom3059, 8 months ago


State Newland's Law of Octaves with a suitable example​

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Answered by piyushsahu624
7

Newland's law of octaves states that when the elements are arranged in the order of their increasing atomic masses, every eighth element has properties similar to those of the first .

Answered by Anonymous
6

Answer:

The law of octaves states that every eighth element has similar properties when the elements are arranged in the increasing order of their atomic masses.

Newlands compared the similarity between the elements to the octaves of music, where every eighth note is comparable to the first. This was the first attempt at assigning an atomic number to each element. However, this method of classifying elements was met with a lot of resistance in the scientific community

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