A chemical element is a Chemical species of atom defined by its number of . The number of protons is called the atomic number of that element. For example, oxygen has an atomic number of 8: each oxygen atom has 8 protons in its atomic nucleus. Atoms of the same element can have different numbers of in their nuclei, known as of the element. Atoms of one element can be transformed into atoms of a different element in , which change an atom's atomic number. Almost all baryonic matter in the universe is composed of elements (among rare exceptions are ).
The term "chemical element" is also widely used to mean a pure chemical substance consisting of a single element. For example, oxygen gas consists only of atoms of oxygen.
Historically, the term "chemical element" meant a substance that cannot be broken down into constituent substances by chemical reactions, and for most practical purposes this definition still has validity. There was some controversy in the 1920s over whether isotopes deserved to be recognised as separate elements if they could be separated by chemical means. By November 2016, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) recognized a total of 118 elements. The first 94 occur naturally on Earth, and the remaining 24 are synthetic elements produced in nuclear reactions. Save for unstable radioactive elements (radioelements) which decay quickly, nearly all elements are available industrially in varying amounts. The discovery and synthesis of further new elements is an ongoing area of scientific study.
The history of the discovery and use of elements began with early society that discovered native minerals like carbon, sulfur, copper and gold (though the modern concept of an element was not yet understood). Attempts to classify materials such as these resulted in the concepts of classical elements, alchemy, and similar theories throughout history. Much of the modern understanding of elements developed from the work of Dmitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist who published the first recognizable periodic table in 1869. This table organizes the elements by increasing atomic number into rows ("periods") in which the columns ("groups") share recurring ("periodic") physical and chemical properties. The periodic table summarizes various properties of the elements, allowing chemists to derive relationships between them and to make predictions about elements not yet discovered, and potential new compounds.
Chemical elements can be organized by name, chemical symbol, and also by properties (as atoms or as substances). The properties of chemical elements as kinds of atom include the atomic number, atomic weight, isotopes, abundance in nature, ionization energy, electron affinity, , and electronegativity.According to Russian-language sources, these are properties of chemical elements properly said, i.e. of kinds of atom. See: The radioactive nuclides can be arranged by length of half-life. As substances, the properties of chemical elements include their density, melting point, boiling point, electrical conductance, thermal conductivity.According to Russian-language sources, these are properties of substances, including simple substances, i.e. substances consisting of a single element. They may depend on temperature and pressure and also depend on an allotrope. See:
One of the most convenient, and certainly the most traditional presentation of the elements, is in the form of the periodic table, which groups together elements with similar chemical properties (and usually also similar electronic structures). Chemical elements can be categorised by their origin on Earth, with the first 94 considered naturally occurring, while those with atomic numbers beyond 94 have only been produced artificially via human-made nuclear reactions.
There are now 118 known elements. "Known" here means observed well enough, even from just a few decay products, to have been differentiated from other elements. Most recently, the synthesis of element 118 (since named oganesson) was reported in October 2006, and the synthesis of element 117 (tennessine) was reported in April 2010. Of these 118 elements, the first 94 elements have been detected directly on Earth as primordial nuclides present from the formation of the Solar System, or as naturally occurring fission or transmutation products of uranium and thorium.
Two or more atoms can combine to form . Some elements form molecules of atoms of said element only: e.g. atoms of hydrogen (H) form diatomic molecules (H). Chemical compounds are substances made of atoms of different elements; they can have molecular or non-molecular structure. are materials containing different chemical substances; that means (in case of molecular substances) that they contain different types of molecules. When different elements undergo chemical reactions, atoms are rearranged into new compounds held together by . Less than twenty elements, including the gold, Platinum group, iron group metals, can sometimes be found uncombined as relatively pure native element minerals. Nearly all other naturally occurring elements exist in the Earth as compounds or mixtures. Air is mostly a mixture of molecular nitrogen and oxygen, though it does contain compounds including carbon dioxide and water, as well as atomic argon, a noble gas which is chemically inert and therefore does not undergo chemical reactions.
The atomic number of an element is equal to the number of protons in each atom, and defines the element. For example, all carbon atoms contain 6 protons in their atomic nucleus; so the atomic number of carbon is 6. The number of protons in the nucleus determines its electric charge, which in turn determines the number of bound of an atom in its ionization state. The electrons occupy that determine the atom's chemical properties.
are atoms of the same element (that is, with the same number of in their nucleus), but having different numbers of . Thus, for example, there are three main isotopes of carbon. All carbon atoms have 6 protons, but they can have either 6, 7, or 8 neutrons. Since the mass numbers of these are 12, 13 and 14 respectively, said three isotopes are known as carbon-12, carbon-13, and carbon-14 (C, C, and C). Natural carbon is a mixture of C (about 98.9%), C (about 1.1%) and about 1 atom per trillion of C. The number of neutrons in a nucleus usually has very little effect on an element's chemical properties. An exception is hydrogen, for which the kinetic isotope effect is significant. Thus, all carbon isotopes have nearly identical chemical properties because they all have six electrons, even though they may have 6 to 8 neutrons. That is why atomic number, rather than mass number or atomic weight, is considered the identifying characteristic of an element.
Most (54 of 94) naturally occurring elements have more than one stable isotope. Only 26 elements are monoisotopic, having exactly one stable isotope; these have an odd atomic number of protons, with the exception of beryllium-9 which has an odd number of neutrons.
Elements with atomic numbers 1 through 82 each have at least one stable isotope (except for technetium, element 43 and promethium, element 61, which have no stable isotopes). However, observationally stable isotopes of some elements (such as tungsten and lead) are predicted to be slightly radioactive with very long half-lives: for example, the half-lives predicted for the observationally stable lead isotopes range from 10 to 10 years. Isotopes are observationally stable when they are theoretically unstable but no radioactive decay has yet been observed. Out of the over 250 nuclides that are called stable, only 90 are considered theoretically stable, meaning they lack a known decay mode.
Elements with atomic numbers 83 through 94 are Radionuclide enough that radioactive decay of all isotopes can be detected. Some of these elements, notably bismuth (atomic number 83), thorium (atomic number 90), and uranium (atomic number 92), have one or more isotopes with half-lives long enough to survive from before the Solar System formed. The remaining longest-lived isotopes have Half-life too short for them to have been present at the beginning of the Solar System, and are therefore "transient elements". Of these 11 transient elements, five (polonium, radon, radium, actinium, and protactinium) are relatively common of thorium and uranium. The remaining six transient elements (technetium, promethium, astatine, francium, neptunium, and plutonium) occur only rarely, as products of rare decay modes or nuclear reaction processes involving uranium or other heavy elements.
The remaining 24 heaviest elements (those beyond plutonium, element 94) are radioactive, with half-life so short that they are not found on Earth and must be synthesized. Five have been discovered in the spectrum of Przybylski's star, from element 95 (americium) to 99 (einsteinium). These are thought to be neutron capture products of uranium and thorium. All 24 heavier elements are radioactive, with short half-lives; if any of these elements were present when the Earth formed, they are certain to have completely decayed, and if present in novae, are in quantities too small to have been noted. Technetium was the first purportedly non-naturally occurring element synthesized, in 1937, though traces of technetium have since been found in nature (and also the element may have been discovered naturally in 1925). This pattern of artificial production and later natural discovery has been repeated with several other radioactive naturally occurring rare elements.
The lightest radioactive isotope is tritium, which undergoes Beta decay with a half-life of 12.3 years. At 2 years, over 10 times the estimated age of the universe, bismuth-209 has the longest known alpha decay half-life of any nuclide, and is almost always considered on par with the 80 stable elements. The isotope tellurium-128 transmutes through double beta decay with a half life of 2.25 years, over 100,000 longer than bismuth-209. The primary source of radiation exposure from isotope decays in the human body come from carbon-14 and potassium-40 intake, which produce an annual effective dose of .
Whereas the mass number simply counts the total number of neutrons and protons and is thus an integer, the atomic mass of a particular isotope (or "nuclide") of the element is the mass of a single atom of that isotope, and is typically expressed in daltons (symbol: Da), aka universal atomic mass units (symbol: u). Its relative atomic mass is a dimensionless number equal to the atomic mass divided by the atomic mass constant, which equals 1 Da. In general, the mass number of a given nuclide differs in value slightly from its relative atomic mass. This mass deficit is primarily due to the nuclear binding energy. For example, the atomic mass of chlorine-35 to five significant digits is 34.969 Da and that of chlorine-37 is 36.966 Da. However, the relative atomic mass of each isotope is quite close to its mass number (always within 1%). The only isotope whose atomic mass is exactly a natural number is C, which has a mass of 12 Da; because the dalton is defined as 1/12 of the mass of a free neutral carbon-12 atom in the ground state.
During the nuclear fusion of lower mass atoms such as hydrogen, the net change in mass deficit is released as energy, as determined by the mass–energy equivalence relationship. This process of fusing hydrogen atoms into helium is what drives the energy output of the Sun. Over time, the result is an increasing concentration of helium at the stellar core. During the evolution of stars much more massive than the Sun, increasingly massive nuclei are then formed through a type of fusion called the alpha process, until iron-52 is reached. The binding energy of a nucleus reaches its peak value for isotopes of iron and nickel. Hence, beyond that point, further fusion results in a lower binding energy, so energy is absorbed rather than released. As a result, an inert iron core forms that does not contribute to the star's energy output.
In the nuclear fission process, the resulting particles have a higher net binding energy. This change in the net mass deficit again results in a release of energy. Hence, highly radioactive elements such as uranium-235 can be useful sources of energy production.
The standard atomic weight (commonly called "atomic weight") of an element is the average of the atomic masses of all the chemical element's isotopes as found in a particular environment, weighted by isotopic abundance, relative to the atomic mass unit. This number may be a fraction that is not close to a whole number. For example, the relative atomic mass of chlorine is 35.453 u, which differs greatly from a whole number as it is an average of about 76% chlorine-35 and 24% chlorine-37. Whenever a relative atomic mass value differs by more than ~1% from a whole number, it is due to this averaging effect, as significant amounts of more than one isotope are naturally present in a sample of that element.
For example, a copper wire is 99.99% chemically pure if 99.99% of its atoms are copper, with 29 protons each. However it is not isotopically pure since natural copper consists of two stable isotopes, 69% Cu and 31% Cu, with different numbers of neutrons. (See Isotopes of copper.) However, pure gold would be both chemically and isotopically pure, since ordinary gold consists only of one isotope, Au.
These orbitals and their sub-shells are grouped together in Electron shell, with each shell having a principal quantum number that indicates the energy level. Each shell can only have a fixed number of electrons, which is given by the formula , where is 1, 2, 3, 4, and so on. Hence, the count of electrons each shell can contain are 2, 8, 18, 32, and so forth. A shell is represented by a row on the periodic table.
The simplest atom is ordinary hydrogen, which consists of one proton and one electron. In its minimum energy ground state, the electron occupies the first shell, designated K. This shell has one subshell designated 1s. The second element, helium, has two protons, two electrons, and usually two neutrons. The second electron occupies the same orbital as the first, completing the shell with Electron pair. For lithium there are three electrons, so one needs to occupy an orbital in the second shell, designated L. Per the Aufbau principle, the third electron occupies the next lowest available energy subshell, which is 2s. This process continues, with successive electrons being placed in the next available lowest energy orbital.
Besides being different by physical properties as substances, metallic and nonmetallic elements have different chemical properties as kinds of atoms: metallic elements form simple , whereas nonmetallic elements (and weak metals) form simple and . An exception is noble gases, which do not form simple anions, whereas oxoanions are known for xenon. However, some metallic elements in higher oxidation states form oxoanions as well. Atoms of nonmetallic elements also form compounds with .
Distinguishing terms are used for certain sets of the more broadly viewed metals and nonmetals. These sets include: , , alkaline earth metals, , , , post-transition metals, , reactive nonmetals, and . In this system, the alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, and transition metals, as well as the lanthanides and the actinides, are special groups of the metals viewed in a broader sense. Similarly, the reactive nonmetals and the noble gases are nonmetals viewed in the broader sense. In some presentations, the halogens are not distinguished, with astatine identified as a metalloid and the others identified as nonmetals.
A more refined classification is often shown in coloured presentations of the periodic table. The properties of the elements can be summarized in this form, which powerfully and elegantly organizes the elements by physical and chemical properties. Each row forms a period of elements that have the same number of . There are 18 numbered groups, each forming its own column of elements whose chemical properties are dominated by the orbital location of the outermost electron. A block is set of elements sharing atomic orbitals that their valence electrons or vacancies occupy.
Use of the periodic table is now ubiquitous in chemistry, providing an extremely useful framework to classify, systematize and compare all the many different forms of chemical behavior. The table has also found wide application in physics, geology, biology,
Melting point and , typically expressed in degrees Celsius at a pressure of one atmosphere, are commonly used in characterizing the various elements. Those elements with boiling points above are termed refractory, while those easily vaporized are volatiles. The element with the widest range between melting and boiling points is gallium, which boils at .
For example, carbon can be found as diamond, which has a tetrahedral structure around each carbon atom; graphite, which has layers of carbon atoms with a hexagonal structure stacked on top of each other; graphene, which is a single layer of graphite that is very strong; , which have nearly spherical shapes; and , which are tubes with a hexagonal structure (even these may differ from each other in electrical properties).
The Standard state of an element is defined by convention, usually as the thermodynamically most stable allotrope and physical state at a pressure of 1 bar and a given temperature (typically ). However, for phosphorus, the reference state is white phosphorus even though it is not the most stable allotrope, and the reference state for carbon is graphite, because the structure of graphite is more stable than that of the other allotropes. In thermochemistry, an element is defined to have an enthalpy of formation of zero in its reference state.
Under the high pressure conditions found within a planetary interior, elements can appear in new crystalline forms, forming allotropes. For example, seven dense classes of silicon crystals can appear at pressures from to , under room temperature conditions. In the extreme conditions found inside a carbon-rich white dwarf, diamond-like amorphous glass may form.
Atoms do not have a fixed Atomic radius, but rather their dimension is determined by the charge distribution of their electron cloud. The measured size depends on the interaction of this cloud with the instrument used to measure it. Hence, various methods will give similar, but slightly different results. Along each row of the periodic table, the radius tends to decrease from the alkali metal column to the noble gases. This is caused by the increasing attraction of the nuclear charge overcoming the mutual repulsion of the electrons as a shell is filled. A smaller radius means the atom is less chemically reactive, as the valence electrons are drawn closer to the nucleus. Depending on the type of chemical bond, the atomic radius determines the atomic separation in a crystal, and hence the mass density.
When an element has allotropes with different densities, one representative allotrope is typically selected in summary presentations, while densities for each allotrope can be stated where more detail is provided. For example, the three familiar allotropes of carbon (amorphous carbon, graphite, and diamond) have densities of 1.8–2.1, 2.267, and 3.515 g/cm, respectively.
National differences emerged over the element names either for convenience, linguistic niceties, or nationalism. For example, German speakers use "Wasserstoff" (water stuff) for "hydrogen", "Sauerstoff" (acid stuff) for "oxygen", and "Stickstoff" (smothering stuff) for "nitrogen"; English and some other languages use "sodium" for "natrium", and "potassium" for "kalium"; and the French, Italians, Greeks, Portuguese and Poles prefer "azote/azot/azoto" (from roots meaning "no life") for "nitrogen".
In the past, the name for new elements was traditionally decided by their discoverers. This changed in 1947, when a conference of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) decided that the names and symbols of new elements would be determined by the IUPAC. The discoverer of a new element had the right to suggest a name, but for purposes of international communication and trade, the official names of the chemical elements both ancient and more recently recognised are decided by the IUPAC.
The IUPAC organization has decided on a style of international English language as a Lingua franca, drawing on traditional English names even when an element's chemical symbol is based on a Latin or other traditional word. For example, adopting "gold" rather than "aurum" as the name for the 79th element (Au). IUPAC prefers the British spellings "aluminium" and "caesium" over the U.S. spellings "aluminum" and "cesium", and the U.S. "sulfur" over British "sulphur". However, elements that are practical to sell in bulk in many countries often still have locally used national names, and countries whose national language does not use the Latin alphabet are likely to use the IUPAC element names.
New elements have been named for their properties, after a mineral from which it was extracted, the location of its discovery, a mythical subject, an astronomical object, or a prominent scientist. According to IUPAC, element names are not proper nouns; therefore, the full name of an element is not capitalised in English, even if derived from a proper noun, as in californium and einsteinium. Isotope names are also uncapitalised if written out, e.g., carbon-12 or uranium-235. Chemical element symbols (such as Cf for californium and Es for einsteinium), are always capitalised.
In the second half of the 20th century, physics laboratories became able to produce elements with half-lives too short for an appreciable amount of them to exist at any time. These are also named by IUPAC, which generally adopts the name chosen by the discoverer. This practice can lead to the controversial question of which research group actually discovered an element, a question that delayed the naming of elements with atomic number of 104 and higher for a considerable amount of time.
Precursors of such controversies involved the nationalistic namings of elements in the late 19th century. For example, lutetium was named after Paris, France. The Germans were reluctant to relinquish naming rights to the French, often calling it cassiopeium. Similarly, the British discoverer of niobium originally named it columbium, in reference to the New World. It was used extensively as such by American publications before the international standardisation (in 1950).
The current system of chemical notation was invented by Jöns Jacob Berzelius in 1814. In this system, chemical symbols are not mere abbreviations—though each consists of letters of the Latin alphabet. They are intended as universal symbols for people of all languages and alphabets.
Since Latin was the common language of science at Berzelius' time, his symbols were abbreviations based on the Latin names of elements (they may be Classical Latin names of elements known since antiquity or Neo-Latin coinages for later elements). The symbols are not followed by a period (full stop) as with abbreviations. In most cases, Latin names of elements as used by Berzelius have the same roots as the modern English name. For example, hydrogen has the symbol "H" from Neo-Latin hydrogenium, which has the same Greek roots as English hydrogen. However, in eleven cases Latin (as used by Berzelius) and English names of elements have different roots. Eight of them are the seven metals of antiquity and a metalloid also known since antiquity: "Fe" (Latin ferrum) for iron, "Hg" (Latin hydrargyrum) for mercury, "Sn" (Latin stannum) for tin, "Au" (Latin aurum) for gold, "Ag" (Latin argentum) for silver, "Pb" (Latin plumbum) for lead, "Cu" (Latin cuprum) for copper, and "Sb" (Latin stibium) for antimony. The three other mismatches between Neo-Latin (as used by Berzelius) and English names are "Na" (Neo-Latin natrium) for sodium, "K" (Neo-Latin kalium) for potassium, and "W" (Neo-Latin wolframium) for tungsten. These mismatches came from different suggestings of naming the elements in the Modern era. Initially Berzelius had suggested "So" and "Po" for sodium and potassium, but he changed the symbols to "Na" and "K" later in the same year.
Elements discovered after 1814 were also assigned unique chemical symbols, based on the name of the element. The use of Latin as the universal language of science was fading, but chemical names of newly discovered elements came to be borrowed from language to language with little or no modification. Symbols of elements discovered after 1814 match their names in English, French (ignoring the acute accent on ⟨é⟩), and German (though German often allows alternate spellings with ⟨k⟩ or ⟨z⟩ instead of ⟨c⟩: e.g., the name of calcium may be spelled Calcium or Kalzium in German, but its symbol is always "Ca"). Other languages sometimes modify element name spellings: Spanish iterbio (ytterbium), Italian afnio (hafnium), Swedish moskovium (moscovium); but those modifications do not affect chemical symbols: Yb, Hf, Mc.
Chemical symbols are understood internationally when element names might require translation. There have been some differences in the past. For example, Germans in the past have used "J" (for the name Jod) for iodine, but now use "I" and Iod.
The first letter of a chemical symbol is always capitalised, and the subsequent letters, if any, are always lowercase; see the preceding examples.
At least two other, two-letter generic chemical symbols are also in informal use, " Ln" for any lanthanide and " An" for any actinide. " Rg" was formerly used for any rare gas element, but the group of rare gases has now been renamed and " Rg" now refers to roentgenium.
As a special case, the three naturally occurring isotopes of hydrogen are often specified as H for H (protium), D for H (deuterium), and T for H (tritium). This convention is easier to use in chemical equations, replacing the need to write out the mass number each time. Thus, the formula for heavy water may be written DO instead of HO.
The 94 naturally occurring elements were produced by at least four classes of astrophysical process. Most of the hydrogen, helium and a very small quantity of lithium were produced in the first few minutes of the Big Bang. This Big Bang nucleosynthesis happened only once; the other processes are ongoing. Nuclear fusion inside stars produces elements through stellar nucleosynthesis, including all elements from carbon to iron in atomic number. Elements higher in atomic number than iron, including heavy elements like uranium and plutonium, are produced by various forms of explosive nucleosynthesis in and neutron star mergers. The light elements lithium, beryllium and boron are produced mostly through cosmic ray spallation (fragmentation induced by ) of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen.
In the early phases of the Big Bang, nucleosynthesis of hydrogen resulted in the production of hydrogen-1 (protium, H) and helium-4 (He), as well as a smaller amount of deuterium (H) and tiny amounts (on the order of 10) of lithium and beryllium. Even smaller amounts of boron may have been produced in the Big Bang, since it has been observed in some very old stars, while carbon has not. No elements heavier than boron were produced in the Big Bang. As a result, the primordial abundance of atoms (or ions) consisted of ~75% H, 25% He, and 0.01% deuterium, with only tiny traces of lithium, beryllium, and perhaps boron. Subsequent enrichment of galactic halos occurred due to stellar nucleosynthesis and supernova nucleosynthesis. However, the element abundance in intergalactic space can still closely resemble primordial conditions, unless it has been enriched by a galactic wind or some other means.
On Earth (and elsewhere), trace amounts of various elements continue to be produced from other elements as products of nuclear transmutation processes. These include some produced by or other nuclear reactions (see cosmogenic and nucleogenic nuclides), and others produced as of long-lived primordial nuclides. For example, trace (but detectable) amounts of carbon-14 (C) are continually produced in the air by cosmic rays impacting nitrogen atoms, and argon-40 (Ar) is continually produced by the decay of primordially occurring but unstable potassium-40 (K).
Three primordially occurring but radioactive actinides, thorium, uranium, and plutonium, decay through a series of recurrently produced but unstable elements such as radium and radon, which are transiently present in any sample of containing these metals.
Besides the 94 naturally occurring elements, several artificial elements have been produced by nuclear physics technology. By 2016, these experiments had produced all elements up to atomic number 118. , more than a thousand different isotopes have been created through nuclear transmutation, of which 900 do not appear naturally.
Beginning with carbon, elements are produced in stars by buildup from alpha particles (helium nuclei), resulting in an alternatingly larger abundance of elements with even atomic numbers, as these are more stable. In general, such elements up to the iron peak are made in massive stars in the process of becoming . Iron-56 is particularly common, since it is the most stable nuclide that can easily be made from alpha particles, being a product of decay of radioactive nickel-56, ultimately made from 14 helium nuclei. Elements heavier than iron and up to bismuth are made in neutron capture processes in lower mass stars, and their abundance in the universe (and on Earth) generally decreases with their atomic number.
The abundance of the chemical elements on Earth varies from air to crust to ocean, and in various types of life. The abundance of elements in Earth's crust differs from that in the Solar System (as seen in the Sun and massive planets like Jupiter) mainly in selective loss of the very lightest elements (hydrogen and helium) and also volatile neon, carbon (as hydrocarbons), nitrogen and sulfur, as a result of solar heating in the early formation of the Solar System. Oxygen, the most abundant element by mass in the Earth as a whole, is retained on Earth by combination with silicon, magnesium, and iron. Aluminium at 8% by mass is more common in the Earth's crust compared to the solar abundance, but it is only 2% by mass in the mantle, which has magnesium and iron in place of aluminium. The surface abundance of iron is lower because it has migrated to the Earth's core during the process of planetary differentiation.
The composition of the human body, by contrast, more closely follows the composition of seawater—save that the human body has additional stores of carbon and nitrogen necessary to form the and , together with phosphorus in the nucleic acids and energy transfer molecule adenosine triphosphate (ATP) that occurs in the cells of all living organisms. The bulk of all life forms on Earth consist of just six elements, described by the acronym CHNOPS: carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur. Certain kinds of require particular additional elements, for example the magnesium in chlorophyll in green plants, the calcium in , or the iron in the hemoglobin in ' red blood cells.
The term 'elements' ( stoicheia) was first used by Greek philosopher Plato around 360 BCE in his dialogue Timaeus, which includes a discussion of the composition of inorganic and organic bodies and is a speculative treatise on chemistry. Plato believed the elements introduced a century earlier by Empedocles were composed of small polyhedral forms: tetrahedron (fire), octahedron (air), icosahedron (water), and cube (earth).
Aristotle, , also used the term stoicheia and added a fifth element, aether, which formed the heavens. Aristotle defined an element as:
Boyle stated his view in four propositions. In the first and second, he suggests that matter consists of particles, but that these particles may be difficult to separate. Boyle used the concept of "corpuscles"—or "atomes", as he also called them—to explain how a limited number of elements could combine into a vast number of compounds.
Boyle explained that gold reacts with aqua regia, and mercury with nitric acid, sulfuric acid, and sulfur to produce various "compounds", and that they could be recovered from those compounds, just as would be expected of elements. Yet, Boyle did not consider gold, mercury, or lead elements, but rather—together with wine—"perfectly mixt bodies".
Even though Boyle is primarily regarded as the first modern chemist, The Sceptical Chymist still contains old ideas about the elements, which are alien to a contemporary viewpoint. For example, sulfur is not only the familiar yellow non-metal but also an inflammable "spirit".
From Boyle until the early 20th century, an element was defined as a pure substance that cannot be decomposed into any simpler substance and cannot be transformed into other elements by chemical processes. Elements at the time were generally distinguished by their atomic weights, a property measurable with fair accuracy by available analytical techniques.
By 1914, eighty-seven elements were known, all naturally occurring (see Discovery of chemical elements). The remaining naturally occurring elements were discovered or isolated in subsequent decades, and various additional elements have also been produced synthetically, with much of that work pioneered by Glenn T. Seaborg. The final naturally-occurring radioactive element, francium, was discovered in 1939 by Marguerite Perey. In 1955, element 101 was discovered and named mendelevium in honor of D. I. Mendeleev, the first to arrange the elements periodically.
Most of the remaining naturally occurring elements were identified and characterised by 1900, including:
Elements isolated or produced since 1900 include:
Occurrence
Atomic nucleus properties
Nuclide
Stability
Isotopic mass and atomic mass
Chemically pure and isotopically pure
Chemical and physical properties
Shells
Periodic trends
Phase transition
Allotropes
Crystal structures
Mass densities
Nomenclature and symbols
Atomic numbers
Element names
Chemical symbols
Specific elements
General chemical symbols
Isotope symbols
Origin of the elements
Abundance
Nearby galaxies that have evolved along similar lines to the Milky Way have a corresponding enrichment of elements heavier than hydrogen and helium. The more distant galaxies are being viewed as they appeared in the past, so their abundances of elements appear closer to the primordial mixture. However, as physical laws and processes appear common throughout the visible universe, scientists expect that these galaxies evolved elements in similar abundance.
+ Top Milky Way abundances Hydrogen 739,000 Helium 240,000 Oxygen 10,400 Carbon 4,600 Neon 1,340 Iron 1,090 Nitrogen 960 Silicon 650 Magnesium 580 Sulfur 440 Potassium 210 Nickel 100
History
Classical definitions
Chemical definitions
Robert Boyle
Isaac Watts
Tabulation
Atomic definitions
Discovery and recognition of various elements
Recently discovered elements
See also
Bibliography
Further reading
External links
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