Super Heavy Elements: On the 150th Anniversary of the Discovery of the Periodic Table of Elements

2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-10
Author(s):  
Yuri Oganessian
Daxue Huaxue ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (12) ◽  
pp. 2-7
Author(s):  
Shuni LI ◽  
◽  
Quanguo ZHAI ◽  
Yucheng JIANG ◽  
Mancheng HU ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
N. C. Pyper

The periodic table provides a deep unifying principle for understanding chemical behaviour by relating the properties of different elements. For those belonging to the fifth and earlier rows, the observations concerning these properties and their interrelationships acquired a sound theoretical basis by the understanding of electronic behaviour provided by non-relativistic quantum mechanics. However, for elements of high nuclear charge, such as occur in the sixth and higher rows of the periodic table, the systematic behaviour explained by non-relativistic quantum mechanics begins to fail. These problems are resolved by realizing that relativistic quantum mechanics is required in heavy elements where electrons velocities can reach significant fractions of the velocity of light. An essentially non-mathematical description of relativistic quantum mechanics explains how relativity modifies valence electron behaviour in heavy elements. The direct relativistic effect, arising from the relativistic increase of the electron mass with velocity, contracts orbitals of low angular momentum, increasing their binding energies. The indirect relativistic effect causes valence orbitals of high angular momentum to be more effectively screened as a result of the relativistic contraction of the core orbitals. In the alkali and alkaline earths, the s orbital contractions reverse the chemical trends on descending these groups, with heavy elements becoming less reactive. For valence d and f electrons, the indirect relativistic effect enhances the reductions in their binding energies on descending the periodic table. The d electrons in the heavier coinage metals thus become more chemically active, which causes these elements to exhibit higher oxidation states. The indirect effect on d orbitals causes the chemistries of the sixth-row transition elements to differ significantly from the very similar behaviours of the fourth and fifth-row transition series. The relativistic destabilization of f orbitals causes lanthanides to be chemically similar, forming mainly ionic compounds in oxidation state three, while allowing the earlier actinides to show a richer range of chemical behaviour with several higher oxidation states. For the 7p series of elements, relativity divides the non-relativistic p shell of three degenerate orbitals into one of much lower energy with the energies of the remaining two being substantially increased. These orbitals have angular shapes and spin distributions so different from those of the non-relativistic ones that the ability of the 7p elements to form covalent bonds is greatly inhibited. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Mendeleev and the periodic table’.


2015 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 51-58
Author(s):  
Parashu Ram Poudel

Nuclear energy is the latest energy source to be used on a large scale. It has tremendous potentiality to meet the growing demand of energy without degrading the environment. Presently the nuclear fission of some heavy elements of the periodic table produces the vast majority of nuclear energy in the direct service of humankind. So nuclear energy produced by nuclear fission and its impacts are the main focus of this article.The Himalayan Physics Year 5, Vol. 5, Kartik 2071 (Nov 2014)Page: 51-58


2019 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 12-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernando Gomollón-Bel

Abstract 2019 is a very special year in chemistry. 2019 marks two major anniversaries: the 100th anniversary of the founding of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), and the 150th anniversary of Dimitri Mendeleev’s first publication on the Periodic Table of Elements [1]. IUPAC is the global organization that, among many other things, established a common language for chemistry—enabling scientific research, education, and trade. In a similar manner, Mendeleev’s system classified all the elements that were known at the time, and even predicted the existence of elements that would only come to be discovered years later. These two anniversaries are closely entwined, as IUPAC has played a major role developing of the modern Periodic Table by ensuring that the most authoritative version of the table is accessible to everyone [2], establishing names and symbols for the newly discovered elements, and also constantly reviewing its accuracy through the IUPAC Commission on Isotopic Abundances and Atomic Weights.


2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (20) ◽  
pp. 6666-6668
Author(s):  
Zachariah M. Heiden ◽  
Marta E. G. Mosquera ◽  
Harkesh B. Singh

This special web collection of Dalton Transactions focuses on the inorganic chemistry of the p-block elements, as a tribute to the 150th anniversary of the development of the periodic table.


Author(s):  
Paul J. Karol

Uranium was Discovered in 1789 by the German chemist Martin Heinrich Klaproth in pitchblende ore from Joachimsthal, a town now in the Czech Republic. Nearly a century later, the Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev placed uranium at the end of his periodic table of the chemical elements. A century ago, Moseley used x-ray spectroscopy to set the atomic number of uranium at 92, making it the heaviest element known at the time. This chapter will deal with the quest to explore that limit and heavy and superheavy elements, and provide an update on where continuation of the periodic table is headed and some of the significant changes in its appearance and interpretation that may be necessary. Our use of the term “heavy elements” differs from that of astrophysicists who refer to elements above helium as heavy elements. The meaning of the term “superheavy” element is still not exactly agreed upon and has changed over the past several decades. “Ultraheavy” is occasionally used. Interestingly, there is no formal definition of “periodic table” by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) in their glossary of definitions: the “Gold Book.” But there are plenty of definitions in the general literature—including Wikipedia, the collaborative, free, internet encyclopedia which calls the “periodic table” a “tabular arrangement of the chemical elements, organized on the basis of their atomic numbers, electron configurations (electron shell model), and recurring chemical properties. Elements are presented in order of increasing atomic number (the number of protons in the nucleus).” IUPAC’s first definition of a “chemical element” is: “A species of atoms; all atoms with the same number of protons in the atomic nucleus.” Their definition of atom: “the smallest particle still characterizing a chemical element. It consists of a nucleus of positive charge (Z is the proton number and e the elementary charge) carrying almost all its mass (more than 99.9%) and Z electrons determining its size.”


Author(s):  
Pascal Quinet

AbstractWe present an overview of the advances made during the past 15 years by the Atomic Physics and Astrophysics Group of Mons University regarding the analysis of the spectra, the transition probabilities, and the radiative lifetimes in heavy elements. More precisely, this review is focused on neutral and lowly ionized atoms belonging to the lanthanide group, the fifth row, and the sixth row of the periodic table (Z = 37–86), for which a very large amount of new data has been obtained.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-114
Author(s):  
Yu.M. Evdokimov ◽  
◽  
I.N. Gerasimova ◽  
T.G. Grusheva ◽  
A.G. Stepanov ◽  
...  

There has been presented a discussion of the article by G.L. Oliferenko, A.N. Zarubina, A.V. Ustyugova, A.N. Ivankin «To the 150th anniversary of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements by D.I. Mendeleev», published in Forestry Bulletin, 2019, vol. 23, no. 6, pp. 117-123. DOI: 10.18698 / 2542-1468-2019-6-117-123


Author(s):  
Board of the journal "Herald of the RAS"

The United Nations declared 2019 the International Year of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements, coinciding with the 150th anniversary of the Periodic Law, opened in 1869 by the great Russian scientist-encyclopedist Dmitry Ivanovich Mendeleev (1834–1907).


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