Periodic Table |
The INTERNET Database of Periodic Tables
There are thousands of periodic tables in web space, but this is the only comprehensive database of periodic tables & periodic system formulations. If you know of an interesting periodic table that is missing, please contact the database curator: Mark R. Leach Ph.D.
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Year: 1987 | PT id = 743, Type = data |
Elsevier's Periodic Table of the Elements
Prepared by P. Lof is Elsevier's Periodic Table of the Elements.
This educational wall chart features the periodic table of the elements supported by a wealth of chemical, physical, thermodynamical, geochemical and radiochemical data laid down in numerous colourful graphs, plots, figures and tables. The most important chemical and physical properties of the elements can be found - without turning a page.
All properties are presented in the form of tables or graphs. More than 40 properties are given, ranging from melting point and heat capacity to atomic radius, nuclear spin, electrical resistivity and abundance in the solar system. Sixteen of the most important properties are colour coded, so that they may be followed through the periodic system at a glance. Twelve properties have been selected to illustrate periodicity, while separate plots illustrate the relation between properties. In addition, there are special sections dealing with units, fundamental constants and particles, radioisotopes, the Aufbau principle, etc. All data on the chart are fully referenced, and S.I. units are used throughout.
Designed specifically for university and college undergraduates and high school students, "Elsevier's Periodic Table of the Elements" will also be of practical value to professionals in the fields of fundamental and applied physical sciences and technology. The wall chart is ideally suited for self-study and may be used as a complementary reference for textbook study and exam preparation.
- atomic number
- standard atomic weight
- ground-state electronic configuration
- element symbol
- element name
- discoverer and year of discovery
- melting point; boiling point
- critical temperature
- molar enthalpy of atomization
- molar enthalpy of fusion
- molar enthalpy of vaporization
- atomic energy levels of the outermost three orbitals
- formal oxidation states
- selection of standard reduction potentials
- first, second & third molar ionization energies
- Pauling electronegativity
- Allred-Rochow electronegativity
- molar electron affinity
- molar volume
- crystal structures
- polymorphic transition temperatures
- atomic radius
- effective ionic radii
- volumic mass (density)
- electrical resistivity
- thermal conductivity
- abundance in the solar system
- abundance in the Orgueil meteorite
- abundance in the solar photosphere
- abundance in the continental crust
- abundance in the primitive mantle
- abundance in the oceanic crust
- naturally occurring isotopes
- mass number and representative isotopic composition
- molar heat capacity
- Debye temperature
- coefficient of linear thermal expansion
- price; annual mining production
- world reserve base
- nuclear spin and NMR receptivity
- Mossbauer active nuclides
- physical (standard) state
- metallic character
- abundance in food (human daily intake)
- principal hazardous property
- Other information: Aufbau principle, quantum numbers, orbitals and sequence of orbital filling; trivial group names; drawings of crystal lattice structures; 12 plots of a chemical/physical property against atomic number; 9 plots of a property against another property; list of SI units and SI prefixes; list of other units and their conversion to SI; list of fundamental physical constants; scheme of fundamental particles; list of radioisotopes with half-life longer than 5 days, presenting half-life and mode(s) of decay, indicating cosmogenic isotopes and isotopes produced by U-235 fission, as well as radioisotopes used in geochronology, pharmacology and nuclear medicine.
Thanks to Eric Scerri for the tip!
See the website EricScerri.com and Eric's Twitter Feed
What is the Periodic Table Showing? | Periodicity |
© Mark R. Leach Ph.D. 1999 –
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This free, open access web book is an ongoing project and your input is appreciated.