INTERACTIVE PERIODIC TABLE OF ELEMENTS

BRINGING THE PERIODIC TABLE TO LIFE

INL INTERACTIVE PERIODIC TABLE OFFERS DETAILED INFORMATION ON ALL 118 ELEMENTS

Idaho National Laboratory has enlisted its experts, researchers and writers to produce an online interactive Periodic Table that offers pop-up information on every single known element. The feature is a testament to the scientific research done at the lab, but also ties into INL’s education and outreach mission, which stretches across Idaho to the most remote and rural places. This mission is evolving all the time, providing relevant and engaging content for teachers and resources for students seeking help with STEM subjects.
Click below to discover information about each element.

*Information for this chart was provided by INL experts along with multiple online sources.

1
18
1

H

Hydrogen1.008
2
  • Subcategory in the metal-metalloid-nonmetal trend
  • Alkali Metal
  • Alkaline Earth
  • Nonmetal
  • Metalloid
  • Post-Transition Metal
  • Transition Metal
  • Halogen
  • Noble Gas
  • Lanthanoids
  • Actinoids
13
14
15
16
17
2

He

Helium4.003
3

Li

Lithium6.940
4

Be

Beryllium9.012
5

B

Boron10.810
6

C

Carbon12.011
7

N

Nitrogen14.007
8

O

Oxygen15.999
9

F

Fluorine18.998
10

Ne

Neon20.180
11

Na

Sodium22.990
12

Mg

Magnesium24.305
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

Al

Aluminium26.982
14

Si

Silicon28.085
15

P

Phosphorus30.974
16

S

Sulfur32.06
17

Cl

Chlorine35.45
18

Ar

Argon39.948
19

K

Potassium39.098
20

Ca

Calcium40.078
21

Sc

Scandium44.956
22

Ti

Titanium47.867
23

V

Vanadium50.942
24

Cr

Chromium51.996
25

Mn

Manganese54.938
26

Fe

Iron55.845
27

Co

Cobalt58.933
28

Ni

Nickel58.693
29

Cu

Copper63.546
30

Zn

Zinc65.38
31

Ga

Gallium69.723
32

Ge

Germanium72.63
33

As

Arsenic74.922
34

Se

Selenium78.971
35

Br

Bromine79.904
36

Kr

Krypton83.768
37

Rb

Rubidium84.468
38

Sr

Strontium87.620
39

Y

Yttrium88.906
40

Zr

Zirconium91.224
41

Nb

Niobium92.906
42

Mo

Molybdenum95.95
43

Tc

Technetium98.907
44

Ru

Ruthenium101.07
45

Rh

Rhodium102.906
46

Pd

Palladium106.42
47

Ag

Silver107.868
48

Cd

Cadmium112.411
49

In

Indium114.818
50

Sn

Tin118.711
51

Sb

Antimony121.76
52

Te

Tellurium127.6
53

I

Iodine126.904
54

Xe

Xenon131.294
55

Cs

Caesium132.905
56

Ba

Barium137.328
57-71

 

Lanthanoids 
72

Hf

Hafnium178.49
73

Ta

Tantalum180.948
74

W

Tungsten183.84
75

Re

Rhenium186.207
76

Os

Osmium190.23
77

Ir

Iridium192.217
78

Pt

Platinum195.085
79

Au

Gold196.967
80

Hg

Mercury200.592
81

Tl

Thallium204.383
82

Pb

Lead207.2
83

Bi

Bismuth208.98
84

Po

Polonium(208.982)
85

At

Astatine209.987
86

Rn

Radon222.018
87

Fr

Francium223.02
88

Ra

Radium226.025
89-103

 

Actinoids 
104

Rf

Rutherfordium(261)
105

Db

Dubnium(262)
106

Sg

Seaborgium(266)
107

Bh

Bohrium(264)
108

Hs

Hassium(269)
109

Mt

Meitnerium(268)
110

Ds

Darmstadtium(269)
111

Rg

Roentgenium(272)
112

Cn

Copernicium(277)
113

Nh

Nihonium(286)
114

Fl

Flerovium(289)
115

Mc

Moscovium(290)
116

Lv

Livermorium(298)
117

Ts

Tennessine(294)
118

Og

Oganesson(294)
57

La

Lanthanum138.905
58

Ce

Cerium140.116
59

Pr

Praseodymium140.908
60

Nd

Neodymium144.242
61

Pm

Promethium(145)
62

Sm

Samarium150.36
63

Eu

Europium151.964
64

Gd

Gadolinium157.25
65

Tb

Terbium158.925
66

Dy

Dysprosium162.5
67

Ho

Holmium164.93
68

Er

Erbium167.259
69

Tm

Thulium168.934
70

Yb

Ytterbium173.045
71

Lu

Lutetium174.967
89

Ac

Actinium(227)
90

Th

Thorium232.038
91

Pa

Protactinium231.036
92

U

Uranium238.029
93

Np

Neptunium(237)
94

Pu

Plutonium(244)
95

Am

Americium(243)
96

Cm

Curium(247)
97

Bk

Berkelium(247)
98

Cf

Californium(251)
99

Es

Einsteinium(252)
100

Fm

Fermium(257)
101

Md

Mendelevium(258)
102

No

Nobelium(259)
103

Lr

Lawrencium(262)

Favorite Elements at INL

Check out the quotes below to learn what draws some current and former employees to certain elements.

HISTORY OF THE PERIODIC TABLE

There is no more enduring reflection of science than the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements, which sheds light not only on the essence of chemistry but physics and biology as well. Go into any scientist’s office or lecture hall anywhere in the world and you are likely to see one. Its story is over 200 years old, and throughout its history, it has been a subject for debate, dispute and alteration.

Attempts to classify elements and group them in ways that explained their behavior date back to the 1700s, but the first actual periodic table is generally credited to Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev, a Russian chemist who in 1869 arranged 63 known elements according to their increasing atomic weight.

Mendeleev left spaces for elements he expected to be discovered, and today’s periodic table contains 118 elements, starting with hydrogen and ending with oganesson, a chemical element first synthesized in 2002 at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna, Russia, by a team of Russian and American scientists.

The term “periodic” is based on the discovery that elements show patterns in their chemical properties at certain regular intervals. Were it not for the simplification provided by this chart, students of chemistry would need to learn the properties of all 118 known elements. The periodic table allows chemists a shortcut by arranging typical elements according to their properties and putting the others into groups or families with similar chemical characteristics. (In the modern periodic table, a group or family corresponds to one vertical column.)

Description

The Periodic Table: Crash Course In Chemistry

By Crash Course 11:21min
Hank gives us a tour of the most important table ever, including the life story of the obsessive man who championed it, Dmitri Mendeleev. The periodic table of elements is a concise, information-dense catalog of all of the different sorts of atoms in the universe, and it has a wealth of information to tell us if we can learn to read it.

Idaho National Laboratory