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The
Periodic Table - Names of the
Periodic Table Elements
classified as Other Metals
The 7 elements classified as "other metals" are located in groups
13, 14, and 15 of the Periodic Table. All of these elements are
solid, have a relatively high density and are opaque.
The Names of the "Other Metals" on the Periodic Table are:
-
Aluminium
-
Gallium
-
Indium
-
Tin
-
Thallium
-
Lead
-
Bismuth
The
Periodic Table
- Names of the Periodic Table Elements
classified as Non-Metals
The 7 elements classified as "Non-Metals" are located in Groups
14,15 and 16 of the Periodic Table. non-metals are not easily able
to conduct electricity or heat and do not reflect light.
Non-metallic elements are very brittle, and cannot be rolled into
wires or pounded into sheets. Non-metallic elements exist, at room
temperature, in 2 of the 3 states of matter : Gases (such as
Oxygen) and
Solids (such as carbon).
The Names of the
Non-Metals elements
in the Periodic Table are:
-
Hydrogen
-
Carbon
-
Nitrogen
-
Oxygen
-
Phosphorus
-
Sulfur
-
Selenium
The
Periodic Table
- Names of the Periodic Table Elements
classified as Halogens
The 5 elements classified as "Halogens" are located in Group 7 of
the Periodic Table.
The term "halogen" means "salt-former" and compounds containing
halogens are called "salts". The halogens exist, at room
temperature, in all three states of matter - Gases such as
Fluorine & Chlorine, Solids such as Iodine and Astatine and Liquid
as in Bromine.
The
Names of the
Halogens elements
in the Periodic Table are:
-
Fluorine
-
Chlorine
-
Bromine
-
Iodine
-
Astatine
The
Periodic Table -
Periodic Table Elements
classified as Noble Gases
The 6 elements classified as "Noble Gases" are located in Group 18
of the interactive Periodic Table.
The elements forming the Six
Noble Gases on
the Periodic Table are:
-
Helium
-
Neon
-
Argon
-
Krypton
-
Xenon
-
Radon
The
Periodic Table
- Periodic Table Elements
classified as Rare Earth Elements
The elements classified as "Rare Earth Elements" are located in
Group 3 of the Periodic Table and in the 6th and 7th periods. The
Rare Earth Elements are of the Lanthanide and Actinide series.
Most of the elements in the Actinide series are synthetic or
man-made.
Dimitri Mendeleev
and the History of the Periodic Table
Read about the History of the
Periodic Table.
Dimitri
Mendeleev was born on February 7th 1834 in Tobolsk, a Town in Siberia.
In 1869 at the age of 35 the famous Russian Scientist perceived a
totally new classification Method "the periodic table", he
included all the 65 elements
known in his time by their atomic weights and chemical valency. Mendeleev then went
even further, using the remaining gaps and spaces
in his periodic table, he correctly concluded that a further group of yet
unknown elements must exist in order to fill in the gaps in his Periodic
Table, this group we now know as the lanthanides, and is Group six
of our modern Standardised Periodic Table.
The Periodic Table
- Interactive Periodic Table
Fifty years after Dimitri Mendeleev
created the Periodic cable, the British scientist Henry Moseley
discovered that the number of protons in the nucleus of a
particular type of atom was always the same. When atoms are
arranged via their
Atomic Number, the
few remaining problems with Mendeleev's original periodic table
disappeared. Due to Moseley's work, the modern periodic table is
based on the atomic numbers of the elements rather than atomic
mass.
Dimitri
Mendeleev's work on the Periodic Table chart recognised
Dimitri Mendeleev has clearly left his mark on modern science,
indeed all
modern Scientists are familiar with Standardised version of his Periodic table. Mendeleyev's homeland, Russia, has recognised the significance of
his work by naming the "Mendeleyev University of Chemical
Technology" in Moscow in his honour.
The
Periodic Table
IUPAC and the
modern standardised Periodic Table Chart
The standardised periodic table in use today was agreed by the
International Union of Pure Applied Chemistry, IUPAC, in 1985 and
now recognises more periods and elements than Dimitri
Mendeleev knew in his day in his day but still all fitting into his concept of
the "Periodic Table".
The
Interactive Periodic Table
- Revision and
Homework Help
Test your
knowledge of chemistry and the Periodic Table by completing the
Element Symbols and Atomic Numbers for all of the elements.
Click the following link to
Blank Periodic Table and
print! Start practising - the more you fill in the empty spaces
the more you will remember. Repetition is the key to good
knowledge retention.
Interactive Periodic
Table- Elements Map!
For additional information about the elements featured on the
Interactive Periodic Table please refer to our comprehensive
Elements Map! |