2019-09-02 Bloomberg Businessweek

(Martin Jones) #1
11

PERIODIC TABLE OF CONTENTS


shown to be true. Increasing
scientific acceptance of these
theories accelerated research
into the material world and
itsindustrialandcommercial
applications.Mendeleevhimself
tookpartin this,investigating
processes related to Russian
coal, oil, and even cheese pro-
duction during the country’s
fitful drive to modernize.
Since his death from influ-
enza in 1907, the table has
changed some, but its fun-
damental organization
remains. Each element has a
one- or two-letter chemical
symbol, usually derived from its

commonnamebutsometimes
fromanotherlanguage,mak-
inggold,forexample,“Au”
fortheLatinaurum. The
atomicnumbertalliesthepro-
tonsin theatom’snucleus.
Thestandardatomicmassis
sometimesgiventomultiple
decimalplaces,withthenum-
berin parenthesesif it’sfor
thelongest-livedisotope.
Thecolumnsdepict
elements that have similar
chemical properties. The alkali
metals, shown in the first col-
umn on the left, for example,
have one electron in their outer
shell and therefore tend to

bond particularly well with the
halogens, in the second col-
umn from the right, which have
seven electrons in their outer
shell and lack the single elec-
tron needed to complete it.
That’s how we get compounds
such as sodium chloride—table
salt—and potassium iodide,
which helps protect the thyroid
from the effects of radiation.
The column on the far right
shows the noble gases, whose
outer electron shells are full,
making most of these ele-
ments useful in lighting since
they won’t react with others.
In most periodic tables, the

lanthanides and actinides are
placed in rows at the bottom to
avoid making the table imprac-
tically wide.
Mendeleev didn’t get every-
thing right: He believed that
elements were unique and
resisted the idea that they
had the same building blocks.
He also produced a convo-
luted case that ether was an
element. But he got the basic
design right, and that’s why
he’s regarded as its inventor
today—and why its sesquicen-
tennial is being celebrated as
the International Year of the
Periodic Table.

2
He
Helium
10
Ne
Neon

5
B
Boron

6
C
Carbon

7
N
Nitrogen

8
O
Oxygen

9
F
Fluorine
16
S
Sulfur

17
Cl
Chlorine

15
P
Phosphorus
34
Se
Selenium

35
Br
Bromine
53
I
Iodine

18
Ar
Argon

13
Al
Aluminum

14
Si
Silicon
33
As
Arsenic
52
Te
Tellurium
85
At
Astatine

70
Yb
Ytterbium

36
Kr
Krypton

31
Ga
Gallium

32
Ge
Germanium
51
Sb
Antimony

29
Cu
Copper

30
Zn
Zinc

79
Au
Gold

64
Gd
Gadolinium

111
Rg
Roentgenium

96
Cm
Curium

113
Nh
Nihonium

98
Cf
Californium

114
Fl
Flerovium

99
Es
Einsteinium

115
Mc
Moscovium

100
Fm
Fermium

116
Lv
Livermorium

101
Md
Mendelevium

117
Ts
Tennessine

102
No
Nobelium

80
Hg
Mercury

65
Tb
Terbium

54
Xe
Xenon

49
In
Indium

50
Sn
Tin

47
Ag
Silver

48
Cd
Cadmium

112
Cn
Copernicium

97
Bk
Berkelium

86
Rn
Radon

71
Lu
Lutetium

81
Tl
Thallium

66
Dy
Dysprosium

82
Pb
Lead

67
Ho
Holmium

83
Bi
Bismuth

68
Er
Erbium

84
Po
Polonium

69
Tm
Thulium

118
Og
Oganesson

103
Lr
Lawrencium

A neon sign in a design
lab at Hong Kong
Polytechnic

Minerals glowing under
UV light near Narsaq,
Greenland

Warning signs at the
Berkeley cyclotron

Making salt at Netarts
Bay on the Oregon
coast

A display at a facility
that extracts gold from
discarded motherboards
PHOTOGRAPHS FOR BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK BY TOMMY TRENCHARD
(NEON), SHAWN RECORDS (SODIUM), KILIII YUYAN (NEODYMIUM),
CARLOTTA CARDANA (GOLD), AND CHRISTIE HEMM KLOK (BERKELIUM)
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