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Gallium atomic properties

For a discussion of the atomic properties of the group 13 metals see Downs AJ (1993) In Downs AJ (eds) Chemistry of aluminum gallium, indium and thallium. Blackie, London, Chapter 1... [Pg.83]

In 1874 the Erench chemist Paul-Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran found two previously unidentified lines in the atomic spectrum of a sample of sphalerite (a zinc sulfide, ZnS, mineral). Realizing he was on the verge of a discovery, Lecoq de Boisbaudran quickly prepared a large batch of the zinc mineral, from which he isolated a gram of a new element. He called this new element gallium. The properties of gallium were remarkably close to those Mendeleev predicted for eka-aluminum. [Pg.313]

Gallium [7440-55-3] atomic number 31, was discovered through a study of its spectral properties in 1875 by P. E. Lecoq de Boisbaudran and named from Gallia in honor of its discoverer s homeland. The first element to be discovered after the pubHcation of Mendeleev s Periodic Table, its discovery constituted a confirmation of the Table which was reinforced shordy after by the discoveries of scandium and germanium. [Pg.158]

Mendeleev also predicted the existence of elements that had not yet been discovered. His arrangement of the then-known elements left some obvious holes in the periodic table. For instance, between zinc (combines with 2 Cl) and arsenic (combines with 5 Cl) were holes for one element that would combine with three chlorine atoms and another that would combine with four. Mendeleev assigned these holes to two new elements. He predicted that one element would have a molar mass of 68 g/mol and chemical properties like those of aluminum, while the other would have a molar mass of 72 g /mol and chemical properties similar to silicon. These elements, gallium (Z = 31, M M = 69.7 g/mol) and germanium (Z = 32, M M — 72.6 g/mol), were discovered within 15 years. Chemists soon verified that gallium resembles aluminum in its chemishy, while germanium resembles silicon, just as Mendeleev had predicted. [Pg.521]

Gallium - the atomic number is 31 and the chemical symbol is Ga. The name derives from the Latin gallia for France or perhaps from the Latin gallus for le coq or cock , since it was discovered in zinc blende by the French chemist Paul-Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudan in 1875. It was first isolated in 1878 by Lecoq de Boisbaudran and the French chemist Emile-Clement Jungflesch. This element had previously been predicted as eka-aluminum by Mendeleev, along with its properties and its location in the Periodic Table. [Pg.10]

The discovery of gallium was followed by the discovery of scandium (Mendeleev s eka-boron) in 1879 and of germanium (eka-sili-con) in 1886. The new elements had the approximate atomic weights and properties that Mendeleev had predicted. The scientific world was astonished. It is probably safe to say that before Mendeleev s predictions were confirmed, no chemist would have believed that the properties of unknown elements could be predicted with such accuracy. [Pg.168]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.280 ]




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