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Missing image Medeleeff_by_repin.jpg Mendeleyev's portrait by Ilya Repin. Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev (Russian Дми́трий Ива́нович Менделе́ев) (February 7 1834–January 20 1907) was a Russian chemist who became known as one of two scientists who created the first version of the Periodic Table of Elements. Unlike any other contributors to the table, he managed to predict the properties of elements yet to be discovered. In several cases he even ventured to question the correctness of the accepted atomic weights, on the ground that they did not correspond with the Periodic Law, and here also he was justified by subsequent investigation.
LifeMendeleev was born in Tobolsk, Siberia, the youngest of fourteen children of Ivan Pavlovich Mendeleev and Maria Dmitrievna Mendeleeva (nee Kornilieva). At the age of fourteen, after the death of his father, Mendeleev attended the Gymnasium in Tobolsk. In 1849, the now poor family Mendeleev relocated to St. Petersburg, where he entered the Main Pedagogical Institute in 1850. After graduating, an illness that was diagnosed as tuberculosis caused him to move to the Crimean Peninsula near the Black Sea in 1855, where he became chief science master of the local gymnasium. He returned with fully restored health to St. Petersburg in 1856. Between 1859 and 1861 he worked on the density of gases in Paris, and the workings of the spectroscope with Gustav Robert Kirchhoff in Heidelberg. In 1863, after returning to Russia, he became Professor of Chemistry at the Technological Institute and the University of St. Petersburg. In the same year, he married Feozva Nikitichna Leshcheva; the marriage ended in divorce. He later married Anna Ivanovna Popova, and their daughter Lyubov was the wife of the famous Russian poet Alexander Blok. Though Mendeleev was widely honored by scientific organizations all over Europe, including the Copley Medal from the Royal Society of London, his political activities worried the Russian government, which led to his resignation from St. Petersburg University on August 17, 1890. In 1893, he was appointed Director of the Bureau of Weights and Measures. In his later years, he worked out and patented the standard for the classical Russian vodka. Perhaps more importantly, he investigated the composition and fields of oil and helped to found the first oil refinery in Russia. He died in St. Petersburg, Russia from influenza. Element number 101, the radioactive mendelevium, is named after him. Periodic TableIn 1866, Newlands published his Law of Octaves. Mendeleev had been working on a similar idea, and on March 6, 1869, a formal presentation was made to the Russian Chemical Society, entitled The Dependence Between the Properties of the Atomic Weights of the Elements, stating
Unknown to Mendeleev, Lothar Meyer was working on a virtually identical periodic table though Meyer never came to the idea of predicting new elements and correcting atomic weights. Meyer and Mendeleev can be considered the cocreators of this table, but it is Mendeleev's discussion of what he called eka-silicon (germanium), eka-aluminum (gallium), and eka-boron (scandium) and his accurate prediction of the properties they were eventually measured to have, that so impressed his contemporaries and landed him the lion's share of credit. Other achievementsIn 1902, in an attempt at a chemical conception of the ether, he put forward the hypothesis that there are in existence two elements of smaller atomic weight than hydrogen, and that the lighter of these is a chemically inert, exceedingly mobile, all-penetrating and all-pervading gas, which constitutes the aether. Mendeleyev also devoted much study to the nature of such indefinite compounds as solutions, which he looked upon as homogeneous liquid systems of unstable dissociating compounds of the solvent with the substance dissolved, holding the opinion that they are merely an instance of ordinary definite or atomic compounds, subject to Dalton's laws. In another department of physical chemistry he investigated the expansion of liquids with heat, and devised a formula for its expression similar to Gay-Lussac's law of the uniformity of the expansion of gases, while so far back as 1861 he anticipated T. Andrews's conception of the critical temperature of gases by defining the absolute boiling-point of a substance as the temperature at which cohesion and heat of vaporization become equal to zero and the liquid changes to vapour, irrespective of the pressure and volume. Mendeleyev wrote largely on chemical topics, his most widely known book probably being The Principles of Chemistry, which was written in 1868-1870, and has gone through many subsequent editions in various languages. Mendeleev is often credited for the scientific justification of the "optimal" ratio of alcohol of 40% (80 proof) used in vodka. The source for the attribution was his doctorate thesis "On Composing Alcohol with Water". The thesis dealt primarily with the physical properties of water-alcohol solutions, such as density. He is given credit for the introduction of the metric system to the Russian Empire. He had invented pyrocollodium, a kind of smokeless powder based on nitrocellulose, and in 1892 organised its manufacture. External links
bg:Димитрий Иванович Менделеев cs:Dimitrij Ivanovič Mendělejev da:Dmitri Mendeleev de:Dmitri Iwanowitsch Mendelejew es:Dmitri Mendeleyev eo:Dmitri MENDELEEV fr:Dmitri Mendeleev ko:드미트리 멘델레예프 he:דמיטרי איוונוביץ' מנדלייב nl:Dmitri Mendeleev ja:ドミトリ・メンデレーエフ pl:Dmitrij Mendelejew ru:Менделеев, Дмитрий Иванович sk:Dimitrij Ivanovič Mendelejev sl:Dimitrij Ivanovič Mendelejev sv:Dmitrij Ivanovitch Mendelejev uk:Менделєєв Дмитро Іванович wa:Dmitriy Ivanovitch Mendeleyev zh:德米特里·门捷列夫 |
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