Chemistry, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

what is dobereiner triad .. please explain two pages​

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Answered by cuteprincess17
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Dobereiner's Law of Triads

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.

The halogens, chlorine, bromine, and iodine, have atomic masses ≈ 35 g/mole, ≈ 80 g/mole, and ≈ 127 g/mole respectively. These values are rounded to the nearest g/mole. If we take the average of the masses of chlorine and iodine we get:

1/2(35 g/mole + 127 g/mole) = 81 g/mole, which is very close to bromine's atomic mass of 80 g/mole.

There are a few other triads:

Lithium, sodium, and potassium

Calcium, strontium, and barium

Phosphorus, arsenic, and antimony

Sulfur, selenium, and tellurium

If you locate these triads on the modern periodic table you'll see they are stacked vertically.

Answered by Rohankaitake007
0

Answer:

when elements are arranged in order of their increasing atomic mass then atomic mass of middle element is the average of another 2

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