Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev
was a Russian Chemist & inventor. He is credited as being the
creator of the first version of the periodic table of elements. Using
the table, he predicted the properties of elements yet to be discovered.
He was born on February, 1834 at Tobolsk in Siberia, in the eastern
part of Russia. The Cazar was then ruling over Russia. His father was a
director of the local school. Dmitri was the fourteenth and the youngest
of the siblings. Theirs was one of the leading families of Tobolsk. In
1787, Mendeleev’s grandfather has set up a printing press. His mother
belonged to the Tatar’s and was known for her beauty. Her family was
also the first to start the glass-manufacturing factory.
Immediately
after his birth, his father lost eyesight and so also his job. But his
mother was very clever and did not lose her spirit. She restarted the
closed glass factory belonging to her parents. This partly helped them
financially. The political prisoners of Russia then were deported to
Siberia to spend their long sentences. One of Dmitri’s sisters married a
revolutionary of the December 1825 revolution. He was educated and was
sent out of Tobolsk. After sometime, the glass factory was destroyed in a
fire and finally it had to be closed. Learning of Dmitri’s thirst for
education and his intelligence, his mother decided to continue his
studies. Siberia then, had no reputed educational institutions. She then
decided to shift the family to Moscow. Arriving in Moscow was an eye
opener and here, he experienced difficulties that one faced in life. Not
knowing Russian and speaking only Siberian, he was denied admission in
Moscow University. He was 17 years when his determined mother moved the
family to St. Petersburg. First thing she did was to teach Russian
language to her son. Then she enrolled Dmitri in a Teacher’s training
school where he learned physics, chemistry and mathematics. Though
knowing only one language, he stood first at the graduation examination.
Dmitri’s
health was not as good as it was earlier. He had problem with his
lungs. Loss of his mother then completely broke his heart. The doctors
expressed their fears that Dmitri would not last beyond six months. He
then shifted southwards to Crimea having dry climate. He got a job of a
science teacher. But in a short while, war broke out. Dmitri had to
shift to Odessa and then to St. Petersburg. He tutored some students at
home during his spare time and earned some money doing so.
During
this period there was no avenue for progress in Russia especially in
the field of science as there were no facilities for research. One had
to seek permission of the authorities to study abroad. Mendeleev sought
permission for studying at France and Germany. He reached Paris and got a
job as an assistant to experimental chemist Henri Regnault. A little
later, he established his small laboratory to conduct research at
Heidelberg. Here, he came in contact and worked with Robert Bunsen, the
inventor of the famous Bunsen burner, and another famous scientist
Gustav Kirchhoff. The three got together to construct spectroscope.
Spectroscope is used in analyzing light. It is also extremely useful in
the study of analysis of chemicals. He attended the local Science
congress in Germany. He was fortunate to hear the famous appeal of
Stanislao Cannizzaro in favour of Avogadro’s work. Later, he utilized
the atomic and molecular mass table of Cannizzaro. As a result, Periodic
Table of all elements was constructed in the period 1868-69. This was
the greatest contribution of Mendeleev- the Periodic Table of Elements.
He got inspiration from here to construct the Periodic Table. After
completing study tour of France and Germany he retuned to St.
Petersburg. Finding a suitable match, he married only to divorce and
settled down after remarriage. He also wrote a research paper on
‘Carbonic Chemical Studies’ in 60 days. Meanwhile, he wrote a thesis on
water and alcohol mixture, which got him PhD. In 1865, when he was just
31, in recognition of his immense contribution and service to the
progress of science, he was appointed the professor of chemistry at the
Petersburg University. Attractive personality and a unique thirst for
research led many students to seek inspiration from this young
professor. His classes were always well attended.
Scientists
were then aware of only 63 elements. It was Mendeleev who gave the
Periodic Table, his invaluable contribution. Due to its unique and
useful layout, all elements were arranged according to their chemical
composition and nature. All 63 elements were arranged according to their
atomic weight. The first was the lightest element hydrogen and uranium
was the last, being the heaviest in element then. He constructed the
periodic table with elements set in seven groups according to regularity
in physical and chemical characteristic properties of elements.
Then,
Mendeleev concentrated on the gaps in the Periodic Table. He began
searching for new elements missing in the periodic Table. He even
predicted several of the along with their atomic weights. Among such
elements were silicon, gallium, germanium and scandium that were
discovered much later. The chemical characteristics predicted by
Mendeleev matched exactly with those of the elements discovered later.
This periodic table was regularly reviewed. Today, the elements are
arranged according to their atomic number. Atomic number stands for the
number of protons in the nucleus of an atom of the element. Atomic
number of an element is nearly equal to the atomic weight or mass of the
element expressed in grams.
Mendeleev died in 1907 at the age of
73 suffering from pneumonia. When he was only 21, doctors had warned
that he would not survive beyond six months. But fate had other designs
for him. At the time of his death, the number of elements in the
periodic table had grown from 63 to 86. There are 92 natural elements.
Apart from these elements, scientists have produced some new elements
using nuclear reactions. The new element with atomic number has been
named mendelevium after him.
http://scientistsinformation.blogspot.com/search/label/Scientist%20Dmitri%20Mendeleev
No comments:
Post a Comment