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Germanium elemental halogens

The person whose name is most closely associated with the periodic table is Dmitri Mendeleev (1836-1907), a Russian chemist. In writing a textbook of general chemistry, Mendeleev devoted separate chapters to families of elements with similar properties, including the alkali metals, the alkaline earth metals, and the halogens. Reflecting on the properties of these and other elements, he proposed in 1869 a primitive version of today s periodic table. Mendeleev shrewdly left empty spaces in his table for new elements yet to be discovered. Indeed, he predicted detailed properties for three such elements (scandium, gallium, and germanium). By 1886 all of these elements had been discovered and found to have properties very similar to those he had predicted. [Pg.33]

In the fourth group, carbon and silicon are both non-metallic, while germanium has a very small electrical conductivity. It is only with white tin and lead that the electrical conductivity approaches the normal values for true metals. In the fifth group, arsenic and antimony are just on the limit between metallic and non-metallic properties, while of the elements of the sixth group, only polonium might be considered to have real metallic properties. The halogens, in the seventh group, show no trace of metallic properties. [Pg.239]

A phenomenon not confined to metals, methylation is the attachment of a methyl group to an element and is a significant natural process responsible for much of the environmental mobility of some of the heavier elements. Among the elements for which methylated forms are found in the environment are cobalt, mercury, silicon, phosphorus, sulfur, the halogens, germanium, arsenic, selenium, tin, antimony, and lead. [Pg.229]

Those elements that lie midway between the alkali metals and the halogens are special to the Ufe sciences. These elements—carbon (6), silicon (14), germanium (32), tin (50), and lead (82), include... [Pg.88]


See other pages where Germanium elemental halogens is mentioned: [Pg.663]    [Pg.415]    [Pg.320]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.738]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.219]    [Pg.1321]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.292]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.798]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.2 , Pg.3 , Pg.5 , Pg.13 ]




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