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Dmitri Mendeleev
Dmitri Mendeleev
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Biography
Mendelevium is a synthetic element with the symbol Md and atomic number
101. A metallic radioactive transuranium element in the actinide series,
101
it is the first element by atomic number that currently cannot be produced
in macroscopic quantities by neutron bombardment of lighter elements. It
is the third-to-last actinide and the ninth transuranic element. It can
Md only be produced in particle accelerators by bombarding lighter elements
with charged particles. Its name comes from the creator of the Periodic
table, Dmitri Mendeleiv.
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Biography
Early life
He was born the 8th of
1. February 1834, as the
youngest son of the
mendeleev descendants,
which consisted of 17
brothers (10 males, 7
females).
The same day he was born,
his father lost his
eyesight, causing him to
lose his job and forcing
her mother to restart the
family glass factory.
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Biography
At adversity’s gate
The year Dmitri turned 13
1.2 his father died and soon
after the factory burned
down in an accident. However
this didn’t stop his mother
from betting all of her
savings into Dmitri’s
education, and tried to
enroll him in both the
St.Petersburg and Moscow
college due to his siberian
origins, so without any
other option, he enrolled in
the Main Pedagogical
Institute of St.Petersburg.
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Biography
Love & Illness
Soon after graduating,
1.3 Mendeleev contracted
tuberculosis, which forced
him to move to a slightly
better and neutral location
for the sake of his
survival, so he travelled
alone to the Black Sea and
spent 2 years resting until
making a full recovery. Not
much later he married
Feozva Nikitichna.
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Biography
Perversion and final ACT
Not too long after his marriage
1.4 with Feozva, Dmitri became
obsessed with another woman
named Anna I. Popova, to whom he
wrote letters trying to gaslight
her into marrying him which
included threats of suicide in
case she tried to turn him down,
and in 1882 he divorced Feozva
and married Anna. Due to this
“unholy” behaviour, he was
“sent” to work as the director
of the bureau of weights and
measures in 1890.
He died in the early 1907 by
Pneumonia
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Contributions to
science
Gallium is a chemical element with the symbol Ga and atomic number 31. Discovered
by the French chemist Paul-Émile Lecoq de Boisbaudran in 1875,[7] gallium is in
31 group 13 of the periodic table and is similar to the other metals of the group
(aluminium, indium, and thallium).
Elemental gallium is a soft, silvery metal at standard temperature and pressure.
Ga In its liquid state, it becomes silvery white. If enough force is applied, solid
gallium may fracture conchoidally. Since its discovery in 1875, gallium has
widely been used to make alloys with low melting points. It is also used in
semiconductors, as a dopant in semiconductor substrates. It was “pre-discovered”
by Dmitri Mendeleev under the name Eka-aluminum.
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Critical Point
The tip of a phase equilibrium
curve is known as a critical
point (or critical condition).
A good illustration of this is
the liquid-vapor critical
point, which is the spot on
the pressure-temperature curve
where a liquid and its vapor
can coexist.
Charles Cagniard de la Tour made the initial discovery of
a critical point in 1822, and Dmitri Mendeleev and Thomas
Andrews called it in 1860 and 1869, respectively.
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Thermal Expansion
Modern thermodynamics and phase transitions
are largely based on Mendeleev's research on
the thermal expansion of liquids and solids.
He discovered that the type of liquid and the
temperature range over which it is measured
affect the coefficient of thermal expansion for
that liquid. Additionally, he used it to
forecast how liquids would behave in various
scenarios, such as those with variations in
temperature and pressure. (1865)
The periodic Table
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The periodic table was found and refined over a long period of
time by a number of scientists, but Dmitri Mendeleev, a Russian
chemist who first published his version of the table in 1869, is
generally credited as its inventor.
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Camacho Uribe, D. R. (n.d.). Tabla periodica. Slideshare.net. Retrieved March 25, 2023, from
https://es.slideshare.net/DanielRCamachoUribe/tabla-periodica-52863202
Pisarzhevski, O. N. (2005). Dmitri ivanovich mendeleiev: Su Vida y Su Obra. University Press of the Pacific.
Seguir, J. (n.d.). Ppt tabla periodica. Slideshare.net. Retrieved March 25, 2023, from https://es.slideshare.net/Jalvarez31/ppt-tabla-periodica
Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Elementos predichos por Mendeléyev. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
https://es.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Elementos_predichos_por_Mendel%C3%A9yev&oldid=149247420
Российский государственный гуманитарный университет (РГГУ): факультеты и специальности. (n.d.). autogear.ru. Retrieved March
25, 2023, from
https://autogear.ru/article/385/676/rossiyskiy-gosudarstvennyiy-gumanitarnyiy-universitet-rggu-fakultetyi-i-spetsialnosti/
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