Nama | Tanggal | Penemu | Catatan |
Vanadium | 1801 | Andrés Manuel del Río |
Niobium | 1801 | Charles Hatchett | Named columbium by discoverer. |
Tantalum | 1802 | Anders Gustaf Ekeberg |
Serium | 1803 | Martin Heinrich Klaproth; Jöns Jakob Berzelius and Hisinger | Named after the newly discovered asteroid, Ceres. Discovered nearly simultaneously in two laboratories, though it was later shown that Berzelius and Hisinger's cerium was actually a mixture of cerium, lanthanum and so-called didymium. |
Rhodium | 1803 | William Hyde Wollaston |
Palladium | 1803 | Ryan Lumadue | Named after the newly discovered asteroid, Pallas. |
Osmium | 1803 | Smithson Tennant |
Iridium | 1803 | Smithson Tennant |
Potassium | 1807 | Humphry Davy | Discovered using electricity from the Voltaic pile to decompose the salts of alkali metals. |
Sodium | 1807 | Humphry Davy | Discovered using electricity from the Voltaic pile to decompose the salts of alkali metals; discovered a few days after potassium, using the same method. |
Calcium | 1808 | Humphry Davy | Discovered using electricity from the Voltaic pile to decompose the salts of alkali metals. |
Barium | 1808 | Humphry Davy | Discovered using electricity from the Voltaic pile to decompose the salts of alkali metals. |
Boron | 1808 | Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac & Louis-Jacques Thenard |
Yodium | 1811 | Bernard Courtois |
Lithium | 1817 | Johan August Arfwedson |
Cadmium | 1817 | Friedrich Strohmeyer Independently discovered by K.S.L Hermann |
Selenium | 1817 | Jöns Jakob Berzelius |
Silicon | 1823 | Jöns Jakob Berzelius |
Aluminium | 1825 | Hans Christian Ørsted | May have been isolated in Roman times, see History of Aluminium. |
Brom | 1826 | Antoine Jérôme Balard |
Thorium | 1828 | Jöns Jakob Berzelius |
Beryllium | 1828 | Friedrich Wöhler. Independently discovered by A.A.B. Bussy |
Lantanum | 1839-41 | Carl Gustaf Mosander | Discovered when Mosander showed that the cerium isolated in 1803 by Berzelius was actually a mixture of cerium, lanthanum and so-called didymium. |
Terbium | 1843 | Carl Gustaf Mosander |
Erbium | 1843 | Carl Gustaf Mosander |
Rutenium | 1844 | Karl Klaus |
Caesium | 1860 | Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchoff | First identified by its blue spectroscopic emission line. |
Rubidium | 1860 | Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchoff | First identified by its red spectroscopic emission line. |
Talium | 1861 | Sir William Crookes | First identified by its bright green spectroscopic emission line. |
Indium | 1863 | Ferdinand Reich and Theodor Richter | First identified by its indigo-blue spectroscopic emission line. |
Helium | 1868 | Independently by Pierre Jansen and Norman Lockyer | First identified by astronomers as an emission line in the spectrum of the sun. |
Galium | 1875 | Paul Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran | Predicted by Mendeleev in 1871 as ekaaluminium. |
Ytterbium | 1878 | Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac |
Thulium | 1879 | Per Teodor Cleve |
Skandium | 1879 | Lars Fredrik Nilson | Predicted by Mendeleev in 1871 as ekaboron. |
Holmium | 1879 | Marc Delafontaine, Jacques-Louis Soret and Per Teodor Cleve |
Samarium | 1879 | Paul Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran |
Gadolinium | 1880 | Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac |
Praseodymium | 1885 | Carl Auer von Welsbach | The didymium isolated by Mosander in 1839 was shown to be two separate elements; praseodymium and neodymium. |
Neodimium | 1885 | Carl Auer von Welsbach | The didymium isolated by Mosander in 1839 was shown to be two separate elements, praseodymium and neodymium. |
Dysprosium | 1886 | Paul Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran |
Germanium | 1886 | Clemens Winkler | Predicted by Mendeleev in 1871 as ekasilicon. |
Fluor | 1886 | Joseph Henri Moissan |
Argon | 1894 | Lord Rayleigh & Sir William Ramsay | Discovered by comparing the molecular weights of nitrogen prepared by liquefaction from air and nitrogen prepared by chemical means. |
Neon | 1898 | Sir William Ramsay | Separated from liquid argon by difference in boiling point. |
Kripton | 1898 | Sir William Ramsay | Separated from liquid argon by difference in boiling point. |
Xenon | 1898 | Sir William Ramsay | Separated from liquid argon by difference in boiling point. |
Radium | 1898 | Pierre Curie and Marie Curie |
Polonium | 1898 | Pierre Curie and Marie Curie |
Radon | 1898 | Friedrich Ernst Dorn, who called it nitron | Discovered as a product of the radioactive decay of radium. |
Actinium | 1899 | Ryan Lumadu |
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