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10.2: Modern Understandings of Elements

  • Page ID
    476543
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    Learning Objectives
    • Know the modern definition of an element.

    The Modern Definition of an Element

    Early chemical experimenters toyed with the many ideas of the ancients as possibilities for what was an element. Chemistry was a bit later than other sciences to experience a true scientific revolution, because much of the practice of chemical experimentation occurred in the field of alchemy, where there was much secrecy and linking of experimental practices to metaphysical interpretations.

    It was Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794) who finally came up with the modern concept of an element as something which can not be broken down into anything simpler by a chemical reaction. Lavoisier also proposed the Law of Conservation of Mass (which we shall discuss shortly). He also proposed many other important ideas in chemistry during his short time of experimentation. His work in defining elements and discovering this first law of chemistry paved the way for the work of Dalton and the others. He certainly had the most impact of any chemist of the 18th century, and in fact some consider him to be the first true chemist.

    The idea that an element was something that could not be broken down any further was not necessarily new. What was new in the work of Lavoisier was that these substances were identified empirically instead of philosophically. Lavoisier proposed about 30 substances as elements which could not be broken down any further. Later experiments showed that some of these could be broken down further and others were not forms of matter at all. However, it was a huge step to list both lead and gold as elements which could not be broken down further when transmuting lead into gold had long been the goal of alchemists. The reliance on experimentation instead of reasoning was again a key to understanding the natural world.

    Watch this video to learn more about the work of Lavoisier and some of the other earlier chemists:

    Glossary

    element
    something which can't be broken down into anything simpler by a chemical reaction.

    This page titled 10.2: Modern Understandings of Elements is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jamie MacArthur via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.