The genius of Mendeleev's periodic table - Lou Serico

3,114,063 views ・ 2012-11-21

TED-Ed


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Translator: tom carter Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
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The periodic table is instantly recognizable.
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It's not just in every chemistry lab worldwide,
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it's found on t-shirts, coffee mugs, and shower curtains.
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But the periodic table isn't just another trendy icon.
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It's a massive slab of human genius,
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up there with the Taj Mahal, the Mona Lisa, and the ice cream sandwich --
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and the table's creator, Dmitri Mendeleev, is a bonafide science hall-of-famer.
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But why? What's so great about him and his table?
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Is it because he made a comprehensive list of the known elements?
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Nah, you don't earn a spot in science Valhalla just for making a list.
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Besides, Mendeleev was far from the first person to do that.
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Is it because Mendeleev arranged elements with similar properties together?
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Not really, that had already been done too.
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So what was Mendeleev's genius?
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Let's look at one of the first versions of the periodic table from around 1870.
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Here we see elements designated by their two-letter symbols arranged in a table.
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Check out the entry of the third column, fifth row.
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There's a dash there.
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From that unassuming placeholder springs the raw brilliance of Mendeleev.
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That dash is science.
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By putting that dash there, Dmitri was making a bold statement.
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He said -- and I'm paraphrasing here --
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Y'all haven't discovered this element yet. In the meantime, I'm going to give it a name.
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It's one step away from aluminum, so we'll call it eka-aluminum,
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"eka" being Sanskrit for one.
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Nobody's found eka-aluminum yet, so we don't know anything about it, right?
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Wrong! Based on where it's located, I can tell you all about it.
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First of all, an atom of eka-aluminum has an atomic weight of 68,
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about 68 times heavier than a hydrogen atom.
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When eka-aluminum is isolated, you'll see it's a solid metal at room temperature.
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It's shiny, it conducts heat really well,
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it can be flattened into a sheet, stretched into a wire,
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but its melting point is low. Like, freakishly low.
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Oh, and a cubic centimeter of it will weigh six grams.
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Mendeleev could predict all of these things simply from where the blank spot was,
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and his understanding of how the elements surrounding it behave.
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A few years after this prediction,
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a French guy named Paul Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran
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discovered a new element in ore samples
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and named it gallium after Gaul, the historical name for France.
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Gallium is one step away from aluminum on the periodic table.
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It's eka-aluminum. So were Mendeleev's predictions right?
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Gallium's atomic weight is 69.72.
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A cubic centimeter of it weighs 5.9 grams.
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it's a solid metal at room temperature,
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but it melts at a paltry 30 degrees Celcius,
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85 degrees Fahrenheit.
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It melts in your mouth and in your hand.
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Not only did Mendeleev completely nail gallium,
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he predicted other elements that were unknown at the time:
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scandium, germanium, rhenium.
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The element he called eka-manganese is now called technetium.
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Technetium is so rare it couldn't be isolated until it was synthesized in a cyclotron in 1937,
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almost 70 years after Dmitri predicted its existence,
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30 years after he died.
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Dmitri died without a Nobel Prize in 1907, but he wound up receiving a much more exclusive honor.
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In 1955, scientists at UC Berkeley successfully created 17 atoms of a previously undiscovered element.
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This element filled an empty spot in the perodic table at number 101,
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and was officially named Mendelevium in 1963.
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There have been well over 800 Nobel Prize winners,
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but only 15 scientists have an element named after them.
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So the next time you stare at a periodic table,
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whether it's on the wall of a university classroom or on a five-dollar coffee mug,
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Dmitri Mendeleev, the architect of the periodic table,
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will be staring back.
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