|
Unwrapping and lifting the Periodic Round
Table out of its colorful box is an exciting experience for a
professional chemist or a chemistry student. Touted as a "new way of
looking at the elements", it is certainly thatat least at first
blush. The "table" consists of four sets of two finely finished
hardwood discs each with the following elemental symbols
and their corresponding atomic numbers pleasingly and
symmetrically wood-burned into their faces. The four sets
of two discs are 1 1/2, 3, 4 1/2, and 6 in. in diameter, each
disc is 3/4 in. thick, and therefore the entire "round table"
stands 6 in. high and is 6 in. in diameter at its base. The eight
beautifully polished discs (represented below) are held
together by center dowels that allow each to be rotated separately.
1-2 (H-He)
3-4 (Li-Be)
5---12
(B---Mg)
13---20
(Al---Ca)
21------
38
(Sc------Sr)
39------
56
(Y------Ba)
57---------
88 (La---------
Ra)
89---------
120 (Ac---------
X)
In the top and smallest set of discs, the two
ns elements are placed each in its own hemisphere in an inner ring. In
the second set, the (n-1)p elements are found outside the
ns elements in an outer concentric ring divided into six
equal segments. Larger rings containing the 10
(n - 2)d and 14 (n - 3)f elements are found in the third and fourth sets
of discs as necessary. The eight layers therefore contain the
almost familiar number of elements: 2-2-8-8-18-18-32-32 only
the double 2 in the beginning is different from what we
expect. All together 120 elements are represented, meitnerium
(109) being the heaviest named element. The symmetry of the
aesthetically pleasing assembly is a reflection of the
orderliness of the periodic table itself and certainly makes a
handsome addition to any desktop or display case.
A brief pamphlet describes the relationship between
the traditional form of the periodic table and this wooden
version. An additional insert provides some information about the
controversy surrounding the names of the transfermium
elements. The pamphlet maintains that the round table is
"easier for beginners to understand" and "more enjoyable to use".
It certainly is enjoyable to take apart and analyze but it
would seem that this is best done after thoroughly learning
about the table in more traditional formats. Also touted is the
fact that "each disc [1 through 8] corresponds to one period
of the two dimensional chart" discussed in the pamphlet.
This assertion is true, but the periods represented are not the
same as those that appear in the traditional form of the
periodic table with which we are all most familiar. For example, disc
3 has sodium and magnesium (the 3s elements) in the
center with boron through neon in the outer concentric ring
(the 2p elements). These eight elements, of course, do not
correspond to either the second or third period of the
traditional periodic table. [An arrangement of seven discs that
would correspond to the familiar periods is known as the
"pyramidal periodic table". Here the discs would contain
2-8-8-18-18-32-32 elements as expected and only 118 elements would
be represented. A modified form of the pyramidal table was
recently suggested by William B. Jensen of the University
of Cincinnati (1)]. One advantage to the format presented
in the "periodic round table" is that the traditional order
of filling the subshells is generated by starting at the top
disc and moving down through the structure. At each new
disc, one always moves from the outside of that disc toward
the center and then proceeds to the next level down.
The advantages of the periodic round table are
primarily twofold: (i) it is a beautifully made piece of scientific art
and (ii) you can take it apart and analyze it and put it back
together again. One suggestion for improvement: cut out
each ring in a given disc so that the table can be taken apart
and reassembled in pieces corresponding to the
traditional subshells. With such a modification, the user could
arrange the various discs as he or she sees fiteither as the
author has arranged it here or with each level containing a
traditional period of the periodic table.
Literature Cited
1. Scerri, E. R. Sci. Am. 1998, 279(3), 78-83.
|