History of the Periodic Table

  • 1669

    1669
    Hennig Brand invented the Philosopher's Stone, which could turn metals into pure gold. He also discovered phosphorus.
  • Period: to

    Span of the timeline

  • 1680

    1680
    Robert Boyle also discovered phosphorus without knowing about Hennig Brand's discovery.
  • 1809

    1809
    By 1809 about 47 elements had been discovered and named. Scientists began to see patterns in their atom structures.
  • 1863

    1863
    John Newlands organized the 56 then known elements into eleven separate groups based upon their atom structure.
  • 1869

    1869
    Dimitri Mendellev used John Newlands' grouping and organized the elements into what is now known as the periodic table. He used the atomic mass as the primary characteristic to decide where each element belonged in his table. The elements were arranged in rows and columns. He even left spaces for elements to be discovered because of the pattern he saw once he started organizing those elements known at that that time.
  • 1886

    1886
    Antoine Becquerel discovered radioactivity. Ernest Rutherford named three types of radiation: alpha and beta and gamma rays. Pierre and Marie Curie began their work and discovered radium and polonium. They also discovered that beta particles were negatively charged.
  • 1894

    1894
    Sir William Ramsay and Lord Rayleigh discovered the noble gases and they were added to the periodic table as group O.
  • 1897

    1897
    J. J. Thomson discovered electrons which were small negatively charged particles. John Sealy Townsend and Robert A. Millikan further investigated electrons and were able to determine their exact charge and mass.
  • 1900

    1900
    Antoine Becquerel discovered that electrons and beta particles were the same thing.
  • 1903

    1903
    Ernest Rutherford decided that radioactivity is what caused atoms to be broken down.
  • 1911

    1911
    Ernest Rutherford and Hans Geiger discovered that electrons moved around the nucleus of the cell's atom much like planets orbit the sun.
  • 1913

    1913
    Niels Bohr discovered the electrons' orbits and that there were more electrons in the outer orbits than in the inner orbits. He also saw that radiation was emitted when an electron would jump from one orbit to another.
  • 1914

    1914
    Ernest Rutherford discovered protons in the nucleus. Henry Moseley labeled the elements with atomic numbers based upon the number of electrons in an atom rather than on their atomic mass.
  • 1932

    1932
    James Chadwick discovered neutrons and identified isotopes. J. D. Cockroft and Ernest T. S. Walton worked together in splitting the atom when working with lithium which they bombarded with protons. The lithium nucleus was divided into two helium nuclei. Ernest O. Lawrence, Milton Stanley Livingston and Milton White worked on the first cyclotron at the University of California in Berkeley.
  • 1945

    1945
    Glenn Seaborg identified lanthanides and actinides which are elements with atomic numbers higher than 92 and are placed in a separate section on the bottom in today's Periodic Table.
  • 2006

    2006
    There are 117 different elements. The most recent elements discovered are meitnerium, darmstadtium, and ununquadium.