Monday, February 8, 2016

[135th Birthday of Dmitri Mendeleyev.]

Dmitri Mendeleyev Biography.
Academic, Chemist, Scientist (1834–1907)
NAME
Dmitri Mendeleyev
OCCUPATION
Academic, Chemist, Scientist
BIRTH DATE
February 8, 1834
DEATH DATE
February 2, 1907
EDUCATION
Main Pedagogical Institute, University of St. Petersburg, University of Heidelberg
PLACE OF BIRTH
Tobolsk, Russia
PLACE OF DEATH
St. Petersburg, Russia
FULL NAME
Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleyev
SYNOPSIS
YOUTH AND EDUCATION
DISCOVERY OF THE PERIODIC LAW
OTHER ACHIEVEMENTS AND ACTIVITIES
LATER YEARS AND LEGACY
Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleyev discovered the periodic law and created the periodic table of elements.

QUOTES
“There is nothing in this world that I fear to say.”
—Dmitri Mendeleyev.
Synopsis.
Dmitri Mendeleyev was born in Tobolsk, Russia, on February 8, 1834. After receiving an education in science in Russia and Germany, he became a professor and conducted research in chemistry. Mendeleyev is best known for his discovery of the periodic law, which he introduced in 1869, and for his formulation of the periodic table of elements. He died in St. Petersburg, Russia, on February 2, 1907.

Youth and Education.

Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleyev was born on February 8, 1834, in the Siberian town of Tobolsk in Russia. His father, Ivan Pavlovich Mendeleyev, went blind around the time his final son was born, and died in 1847. The scientist's mother, Mariya Dmitriyevna Kornileva, worked as the manager of a glass factory to support herself and her children. When the factory burned down in 1848, the family moved to St. Petersburg.
Mendeleyev attended the Main Pedagogical Institute in St. Petersburg and graduated in 1855. After teaching in the Russian cities of Simferopol and Odessa, he returned to St. Petersburg to earn a master's degree. Mendeleyev continued his studies abroad, with two years at the University of Heidelberg.

Discovery of the Periodic Law.

As a professor, Mendeleyev taught first at the St. Petersburg Technological Institute and then at the University of St. Petersburg, where he remained through 1890. Realizing he was in need of a quality textbook to cover the subject of inorganic chemistry, he put together one of his own, The Principles of Chemistry.
While he was researching and writing that book in the 1860s, Mendeleyev made the discovery that led to his most famous achievement. He noticed certain recurring patterns between different groups of elements and, using existing knowledge of the elements' chemical and physical properties, he was able to make further connections. He systematically arranged the dozens of known elements by atomic weight in a grid-like diagram; following this system, he could even predict the qualities of still-unknown elements. In 1869, Mendeleyev formally presented his discovery of the periodic law to the Russian Chemical Society.
At first, Mendeleyev's system had very few supporters in the international scientific community. It gradually gained acceptance over the following two decades with the discoveries of three new elements that possessed the qualities of his earlier predictions. In London in 1889, Mendeleyev presented a summary of his collected research in a lecture titled "The Periodic Law of the Chemical Elements." His diagram, known as the periodic table of elements, is still used today.

Source:-
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dmitri_Mendeleev

No comments:

Post a Comment