History of the Periodic Table (OCR GCSE Chemistry A, Combined (Gateway Science Suite)): Revision Notes
1.2.2 History of the Periodic Table
Early Classification
In the early 19th century, scientists like Johann Döbereiner noticed that some elements with similar properties could be grouped into "triads." This was an early attempt to classify elements.
Mendeleev's Contribution (1869)
The most significant development came from Dmitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist, who created the first widely recognised version of the Periodic Table. Mendeleev arranged the elements in order of increasing atomic mass but importantly, he also grouped elements with similar properties together. He even left gaps for elements that had not yet been discovered, predicting their properties with remarkable accuracy.
Modern Periodic Table
Later developments led to the modern Periodic Table, where elements are arranged by increasing atomic number (the number of protons). This arrangement resolved inconsistencies that existed when elements were arranged by atomic mass alone.
Significance
The Periodic Table not only organises elements in a meaningful way but also helps predict the properties of new elements and their compounds.