3D Periodic Table: The first periodic table was developed in 1862 by a French geologist called Alexandre-Émile Béguyer de Chancourtois. He plotted the elements on a cylinder with a circumference of 16 units, and noted the resulting helix placed elements with similar p…
Chemists can’t agree on the best way to arrange the elements, prompting proposals of everything from spiral-shaped alternatives to radically elongated versions
I’ve always wondered what it would look like if each square’s area was proportional to the element’s abundance on Earth, or the Cosmos. I am linking to this as although it isn’t it, it does give it a modern day twist.
New periodic table focuses on sustainability, gaining a physics PhD age 89 – Physics World
This is cool, I made one at college once, and wished you could buy them as they are great. A magnetic one that you could assemble and disassemble would be a great gift too.
Introducing the Nuclear Periodic Table of Elements
Could be done with html / javascript then uploaded onto a site that lets people create their own charts and connect them together – it sounds like a good way to delve deeper into any subject, I like it, lots of applications, from chemistry and physics to economics and politics.
Pie charts are circular graphs that display parts-of-a-whole. Pie Charts are great for comparing different categories. Be inspired with Infogram gallery and create a pie chart.
You can make this beautiful version at instructables.
zillions of options have been suggested. it likely won’t change though. Its; just wrong and likely will be forever. Just to confuse students.
This, but it looks like that “is it a rabbit or a duck” puzzle.
A more useful periodic table
(3 upvotes)The periodic table isn’t a table, it wraps around itself
(2 upvotes)I’ve always wondered what it would look like if each square’s area was proportional to the element’s abundance on Earth, or the Cosmos. I am linking to this as although it isn’t it, it does give it a modern day twist.
This is cool, I made one at college once, and wished you could buy them as they are great. A magnetic one that you could assemble and disassemble would be a great gift too.
This?
Could be done with html / javascript then uploaded onto a site that lets people create their own charts and connect them together – it sounds like a good way to delve deeper into any subject, I like it, lots of applications, from chemistry and physics to economics and politics.
Infogram should make them so you click a segment of the pie and it takes you to another full pie. That would do the trick.