The Faber Book of Science (21 page)

BOOK: The Faber Book of Science
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Could some order be found in this body of diverse atoms? Was there any connection between these elements? Could some system of evolution or development be traced among them, such as Darwin, ten years before, had found among the multiform varieties of organic life? Mendeléeff wondered. The problem haunted his dreams. Constantly his mind reverted to this puzzling question.

Mendeléeff was a dreamer and a philosopher. He was going to find the key to this heterogeneous collection of data. Perhaps nature had a simple secret to unfold. And while he believed it to be ‘the glory of God to conceal a thing,’ he was firmly convinced that it was ‘the honor of kings to search it out.’ And what a boon it would prove to his students!

He arranged all the elements in the order of increasing atomic weights, starting with the lightest, hydrogen, and completing his table with uranium, the heaviest. He saw no particular value in arranging the elements in this way; it had been done previously. Unknown to Mendeléeff, an Englishman, John Newlands, had three years
previously
read, before the English Chemical Society at Burlington House, a paper on the arrangement of the elements. Newlands had noticed that each succeeding eighth element in his list showed properties similar to the first element. This seemed strange. He compared the table of the elements to the keyboard of a piano with its eighty-eight notes divided into periods or octaves of eight. ‘The members of the same group of elements,’ he said, ‘stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more
octaves
in music’ The members of the learned society of London laughed at his Law of Octaves. Professor Foster ironically inquired if he had ever examined the elements according to their initial letters. No wonder – think of comparing the chemical elements to the keyboard of a piano! One might as well compare the sizzling of sodium as it skims over water to the music of the heavenly spheres. ‘Too fantastic,’ they agreed, and J. A. R. Newlands almost went down to oblivion.

Mendeléeff was clear-visioned enough not to fall into such a pit. He took sixty-three cards and placed on them the names and properties of the elements. These cards he pinned on the walls of his laboratory. Then he carefully re-examined the data. He sorted out the similar elements and pinned their cards together again on the walls. A striking relationship was thus made clear.

Mendeléeff now arranged the elements into seven groups, starting with lithium (at. wt. 7), and followed by beryllium (at. wt. 9), boron (11), carbon (12), nitrogen (14), oxygen (16) and fluorine (19). The next element in the order of increasing atomic weight was sodium (23). This element resembled lithium very closely in both physical and chemical properties. He therefore placed it below lithium in his table. After placing five more elements he came to chlorine, which had properties very similiar to fluorine, under which it miraculously fell in his list. In this way he continued to arrange the remainder of the elements. When his list was completed he noticed a most remarkable order. How beautifully the elements fitted into their places! The very active metals lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium and caesium fell into one group (No. 1). The extremely active non-metals, fluorine, chlorine, bromine and iodine, all appeared in the seventh group.

Mendeléeff had discovered that the properties of the elements ‘were periodic functions of their atomic weights,’ that is, their properties repeated themselves periodically after each seven elements. What a simple law he had discovered! But here was another astonishing fact. All the elements in Group I united with oxygen two atoms to one. All the atoms of the second group united with oxygen atom for atom. The elements in Group III joined with oxygen two atoms to three. Similar uniformities prevailed in the remaining groups of elements. What in the realm of nature could be more simple? To know the properties of one element of a certain group was to know, in a general way, the properties of all the elements in that group. What a saving of time and effort for his chemistry students!

Could his table be nothing but a strange coincidence? Mendeléeff wondered. He studied the properties of even the rarest of the elements. He re-searched the chemical literature lest he had, in the ardor of his work, misplaced an element to fit in with his beautiful edifice. Yes, here was a mistake! He had misplaced iodine, whose atomic weight was recorded as 127, and tellurium, 128, to agree with his scheme of things. Mendeléeff looked at his Periodic Table of the Elements and
saw that it was good. With the courage of a prophet he made bold to say that the atomic weight of tellurium was wrong; that it must be between 123 and 126 and not 128, as its discoverer had determined. Here was downright heresy, but Dmitri was not afraid to buck the established order of things. For the present, he placed the element tellurium in its proper position, but with its false atomic weight. Years later his action was upheld, for further chemical discoveries proved his position of tellurium to be correct. This was one of the most magnificent prognostications in chemical history.

Perhaps Mendeléeff’s table was now free from flaws. Again he examined it, and once more he detected an apparent contradiction. Here was gold with the accepted atomic weight of 196.2 placed in a space which rightfully belonged to platinum, whose established atomic weight was 196.7. The fault-finders got busy. They pointed out this discrepancy with scorn. Mendeléeff made brave enough to claim that the figures of the analysts, and not his table, were inaccurate. He told them to wait. He would be vindicated. And again the balance of the chemist came to the aid of the philosopher, for the then-accepted weights were wrong and Mendeléeff was again right. Gold had an atomic weight greater than platinum. This table of the queer Russian was almost uncanny in its accuracy!

Mendeléeff was still to strike his greatest bolt. Here were places in his table which were vacant. Were they always to remain empty or had the efforts of man failed as yet to uncover some missing elements which belonged in these spaces? A less intrepid person would have shrunk from the conclusion that this Russian drew. Not this Tartar, who would not cut his hair even to please his Majesty, Czar Alexander III. He was convinced of the truth of his great generalization, and did not fear the blind, chemical sceptics.

Here in Group III was a gap between calcium and titanium. Since it occurred under boron, the missing element must resemble boron. This was his eka-boron which he predicted. There was another gap in the same group under aluminium. This element must resemble aluminium, so he called it eka-aluminium. And finally he found another vacant space between arsenic and eka-aluminium, which appeared in the fourth group. Since its position was below the element silicon, he called it eka-silicon. Thus he predicted three undiscovered elements and left it to his chemical contemporaries to verify his prophecies. Not such remarkable guesses after all – at least not to the genius Mendeléeff!

In 1869 Mendeléeff, before the Russian Chemical Society, presented his paper
On
the
Relation
of
the
Properties
to
the
Atomic
Weights
of
the
Elements.
In a vivid style he told them of his epoch-making conclusions. The whole scientific world was overwhelmed. His great discovery, however, had not sprung forth overnight full grown. The germ of this important law had begun to develop years before. Mendeléeff admitted that ‘the law was the direct outcome of the stock of generalizations of established facts which had accumulated by the end of the decade 1860–1870.’ De Chancourtois in France, Strecher in Germany, Newlands in England, and Cooke in America had noticed similarities among the properties of certain elements. But no better example could be cited of how two men, working independently in different countries, can arrive at the same generalization, than the case of Lothar Meyer, who conceived the Periodic Law at almost the same time as Mendeléeff. In 1870 there appeared in
Liebig’s
Annalen
a table of the elements by Lothar Meyer which was almost identical with that of the Russian. The time was ripe for this great law. Some wanted the boldness or the genius necessary ‘to place the whole question at such a height that its reflection on the facts could be clearly seen.’ This was the statement of Mendeléeff himself. Enough elements had been discovered and studied to make possible the arrangement of a table such as Mendeléeff had prepared. Had Dmitri been born a generation before, he could never, in 1840, have enunicated the Periodic Law.

‘The Periodic Law has given to chemistry that prophetic power long regarded as the peculiar dignity of the sister science, astronomy.’ So wrote the American scientist Bolton. Mendeléeff had made places for more than sixty-three elements in his Table. Three more he had predicted. What of the other missing building blocks of the universe? Twenty-five years after the publication of Mendeléeff’s Table, two Englishmen, following a clue of Cavendish, came upon a new group of elements of which even the Russian had never dreamed. These elements constituted a queer company – the Zero Group as it was later named. Its members, seven in number, are the most unsociable of all the elements. Even with that ideal mixer, potassium, they will normally not unite. Fluorine, most violent of all the non-metals, cannot shake these hermit elements out of their inertness. Moissan tried sparking them with fluorine but failed to make them combine. (Xenon tetrafluoride and several other ‘noble’ compounds were prepared in 1962. They are no longer regarded as non-reactive.)
Besides, they are all gases, invisible and odorless. Small wonder they had remained so long hidden.

True, the first of these noble gases, as they were called, had been observed in the sun’s chromosphere during a solar eclipse in August, 1868, but as nothing was known about it except its orange yellow spectral line, Mendeléeff did not even include it in his table. Later, Hillebrand described a gas expelled from cleveite. He knew enough about it to state that it differed from nitrogen but he failed to detect its real nature. Then Ramsay, obtaining a sample of the same mineral, bottled the gas expelled from it in a vacuum tube, sparked it and detected the spectral line of helium. The following year Kayser announced the presence of this gas in very minute amounts, one part in 185,000, in the earth’s atmosphere.

The story of the discovery and isolation of these gases from the air is one of the most amazing examples of precise and painstaking researches in the whole history of science. Ramsay had been casually introduced to chemistry while convalescing from an injury received in a football game. He had picked up a textbook in chemistry and turned to the description of the manufacture of gunpowder. This was his first lesson in chemistry. Rayleigh, his co-worker, had been urged to enter either the ministry or politics, and when he claimed that he owed a duty to science, was told his action was a lapse from the straight and narrow path. Such were the initiations of these two Englishmen into the science which brought them undying fame. They worked with gases so small in volume that it is difficult to understand how they could have studied them in their time. Rayleigh, in 1894, wrote to Lady Frances Balfour: ‘The new gas has been leading me a life. I had only about a quarter of a thimbleful. I now have a more decent quantity but it has cost about a thousand times its weight in gold. It has not yet been christened. One pundit suggested “aeron,” but when I have tried the effect privately, the answer has usually been, “When may we expect Moses?”’ It was finally christened argon, and if not Moses, there came other close relatives: neon, krypton, xenon and finally radon. These gases were isolated by Ramsay and Travers from one hundred and twenty tons of air which had been liquefied. Sir William Ramsay used a micro-balance which could detect a difference in weight of one fourteen-trillionth of an ounce. He worked with a millionth of a gram of invisible, gaseous radon – the size of a tenth of a pin’s head.

Besides these six Zero Group elements, some of which are doing effective work in argon and neon incandescent lamps, in helium-filled dirigibles, in electric signs, and in replacing the nitrogen in compressed air to prevent the ‘bends’ among caisson workers, seventeen other elements were unearthed. So that, a year after Mendeléeff died in 1907, eighty-six elements were listed in the Periodic Table, a fourfold increase since the days of Lavoisier …

To the end, Mendeléeff clung to scientific speculations. He published an attempt towards a chemical conception of the ether. He tried to solve the mystery of this intangible something which was believed to pervade the whole universe. To him ether was material, belonged to the zero Group of Elements, and consisted of particles a million times smaller than the atoms of hydrogen.

Two years after he was laid beside the grave of his mother and son, the American Pattison Muir declared that ‘the future will decide whether the Periodic Law is the long looked for goal, or only a stage in the journey: a resting place while material is gathered for the next advance.’ Had Mendeléeff lived a few more years, he would have witnessed the beginnings of the final development of his Periodic Table by a young Englishman at Manchester [Henry Mosely, who
discovered
the Law of Atomic Numbers, and was killed at Gallipoli in 1915 aged twenty-six].

The Russian peasant of his day never heard of the Periodic Law, but he remembered Dmitri Mendeléeff for another reason. One day, to photograph a solar eclipse, he shot into the air in a balloon, ‘flew on a bubble and pierced the sky.’ But to every boy and girl of the Soviet Union today Mendeléeff is a national hero. A special Mendeléeff stamp in his honor was issued in 1957 on the fiftieth anniversary of his death, and a new transuranium element, Number 101, created in 1955, was named
mendelevium
to commemorate his classic
contribution
to the science of chemistry.

Source: Bernard Jaffe,
Crucibles:
The
Story
of
Chemistry
from
Ancient
Alchemy
to
Nuclear
Fission,
new and revised updated fourth edition, New York, Dover Publications, 1976.

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