论文标题
有关元素周期表的三个相关主题
Three related topics on the periodic tables of elements
论文作者
论文摘要
已经提出了各种化学元素的周期性表。正是Mendeleev根据广泛的周期法提出了一个周期性表,并预测当时有许多未知要素。当前在全球使用的元素周期表是由Werner在1905年开创的长期形式。作为第一个主题,我们描述了Pfeiffer(1920)的工作,后者在主桌子下方的单独桌子中完善了Werner的工作,并重新排列了稀有的元素,以方便起见。当今使用的周期性表格基本上继承了Pfeiffer的安排。尽管长格式表更精确地代表了核周围的电子轨道,但它们会失去Mendeleev的短形式表的某些特征,以表达形成化合物时元素化学性质的相似性。作为第二个主题,我们比较了各种三维螺旋周期表,这些表解决了这方面的长形式周期表的某些缺点。特别是,我们解释了3D元素周期表“ Elementouch”(Maeno 2001)如何将S-和P块结合到一个管中,可以恢复Mendeleev的定期定律的特征。最后,我们根据质子魔法数字(Hagino和Maeno 2020)在最近提出的核周期表上介绍了一个主题。在这里,核壳结构导致元素的新布置,质子魔术核被视为贵族原子。我们表明,由于其魔术数量是偶然的巧合,在原子和核周期表中,原子和核周期表中元素的一致性很常见。
A large variety of periodic tables of the chemical elements have been proposed. It was Mendeleev who proposed a periodic table based on the extensive periodic law and predicted a number of unknown elements at that time. The periodic table currently used worldwide is of a long form pioneered by Werner in 1905. As the first topic, we describe the work of Pfeiffer (1920), who refined Werner's work and rearranged the rare-earth elements in a separate table below the main table for convenience. Today's widely used periodic table essentially inherits Pfeiffer's arrangements. Although long-form tables more precisely represent electron orbitals around a nucleus, they lose some of the features of Mendeleev's short-form table to express similarities of chemical properties of elements when forming compounds. As the second topic, we compare various three-dimensional helical periodic tables that resolve some of the shortcomings of the long-form periodic tables in this respect. In particular, we explain how the 3D periodic table "Elementouch" (Maeno 2001), which combines the s- and p-blocks into one tube, can recover features of Mendeleev's periodic law. Finally we introduce a topic on the recently proposed nuclear periodic table based on the proton magic numbers (Hagino and Maeno 2020). Here, the nuclear shell structure leads to a new arrangement of the elements with the proton magic-number nuclei treated like noble-gas atoms. We show that the resulting alignments of the elements in both the atomic and nuclear periodic tables are common over about two thirds of the tables because of a fortuitous coincidence in their magic numbers.