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Neon Individual Element of the Periodic Table T-Shirt

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Kids Basic T-Shirt
+£23.00
Black
Classic Printing: No Underbase
-£7.70
-£4.60
-£7.70
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Vivid Printing: White Underbase

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Style: Kids' Basic T-Shirt

Wait 'till you get this tee on your kiddo, it'll take his everyday style to a whole new level--especially when you customise it with your own design.

Size & Fit

  • Model is 135 cm and is wearing a medium
  • Garment is unisex sizing
  • Standard fit
  • True to size

Fabric & Care

  • 6.0 oz.,/203 gsm, pre-shrunk 100% ComfortSoft® cotton; Oxford Green is 60/40
  • Shoulder-to-shoulder taping with coverstitched collar
  • Double-needle stitched armholes and sleeves
  • Imported
  • Machine wash cold

About This Design

No neon ink will be used when printing. Neon colors may appear darker than what you see on your screen.
Neon Individual Element of the Periodic Table T-Shirt

Neon Individual Element of the Periodic Table T-Shirt

The periodiс table of the chemical elements (also Mendeleev's table, periodic table of the elements or just periodic table) is a tabular display of the chemical elements. Although precursors to this table exist, its invention is generally credited to Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev in 1869, who intended the table to illustrate recurring ("periodic") trends in the properties of the elements. The layout of the table has been refined and extended over time, as new elements have been discovered, and new theoretical models have been developed to explain chemical behaviour. The periodic table is now ubiquitous within the academic discipline of chemistry, providing an extremely useful framework to classify, systematise, and compare all of the many different forms of chemical behaviour. The table has found wide application in chemistry, physics, biology, and engineering, especially chemical engineering. The current standard table contains 117 elements as of July 2009 In 1789, Antoine Lavoisier published a list of 33 chemical elements. Although Lavoisier grouped the elements into gases, metals, non-metals, and earths, chemists spent the following century searching for a more precise classification scheme. In 1829, Johann Wolfgang Döbereiner observed that many of the elements could be grouped into triads (groups of three) based on their chemical properties. Lithium, sodium, and potassium, for example, were grouped together as being soft, reactive metals. Döbereiner also observed that, when arranged by atomic weight, the second member of each triad was roughly the average of the first and the third. This became known as the Law of triads.[citation needed] German chemist Leopold Gmelin worked with this system, and by 1843 he had identified ten triads, three groups of four, and one group of five. Jean Baptiste Dumas published work in 1857 describing relationships between various groups of metals. Although various chemists were able to identify relationships between small groups of elements, they had yet to build one scheme that encompassed them all. German chemist August Kekulé had observed in 1858 that carbon has a tendency to bond with other elements in a ratio of one to four. Methane, for example, has one carbon atom and four hydrogen atoms. This concept eventually became known as valency. In 1864, fellow German chemist Julius Lothar Meyer published a table of the 49 known elements arranged by valency. The table revealed that elements with similar properties often shared the same valency. English chemist John Newlands published a series of papers in 1864 and 1865 that described his attempt at classifying the elements: When listed in order of increasing atomic weight, similar physical and chemical properties recurred at intervals of eight, which he likened to the octaves of music. This law of octaves, however, was ridiculed by his contemporaries.[8] Portrait of Dmitri MendeleevRussian chemistry professor Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev and Julius Lothar Meyer independantly published their periodic tables in 1869 and 1870, respectively. They both constructed their tables in a similar manner: by listing the elements in a row or column in order of atomic weight and starting a new row or column when the characteristics of the elements began to repeat. The success of Mendeleev's table came from two decisions he made: The first was to leave gaps in the table when it seemed that the corresponding element had not yet been discovered. Mendeleev was not the first chemist to do so, but he went a step further by using the trends in his periodic table to predict the properties of those missing elements, such as gallium and germanium. The second decision was to occasionally ignore the order suggested by the atomic weights and switch adjacent elements, such as cobalt and nickel, to better classify them into chemical families. With the development of theories of atomic structure, it became apparent that Mendeleev had inadvertently listed the elements in order of increasing atomic number. With the development of modern quantum mechanical theories of electron configurations within atoms, it became apparent that each row (or period) in the table corresponded to the filling of a quantum shell of electrons. In Mendeleev's original table, each period was the same length. However, because larger atoms have more electron sub-shells, modern tables have progressively longer periods further down the table. In the years that followed after Mendeleev published his periodic table, the gaps he left were filled as chemists discovered more chemical elements. The last naturally-occurring element to be discovered was Francium (referred to by Mendeleev as eka-caesium) in 1939. The periodic table has also grown with the addition of synthetic and transuranic elements. The first transuranic element to be discovered was neptunium, which was formed by bombarding uranium with neutrons in a cyclotron in 1939 "Periodic Table of Elements" Periodic Table of Elements Dmitri Mendeleev Antoine Lavoisier Chemist Chemicals Chemistry Physics Lab Laboratory Experiment Experiments Chart Poster August Kekulé Organic Physical Analytical Biochemist Biochemistry Biochemical Biological Biology Biologist Compound Compounds Molecule Molecular Mole Avogadro Formula Symbol "Chemical Symbol" Atom Atomic "Atomic Weight" Proton Neutron Electron Deuterium Tritium Isotope Isomer Molarity Radioactive Nucleus Orbital Spin Quantum Row Period Actinium Aluminium Americium Antimony Argon Arsenic Astatine Barium Berkelium Beryllium Bismuth Bohrium Boron Bromine Cadmium Calcium Californium Carbon Cerium Caesium Chlorine Chromium Cobalt Copper Curium Darmstadtium Dubnium Dysprosium Einsteinium Erbium Europium Fermium Fluorine Francium Gadolinium Gallium Germanium Gold Hafnium Hassium Helium Holmium Hydrogen Indium Iodine Iridium Iron Krypton Lawrencium Lead Lithium Lutetium Magnesium Manganese Meitnerium Mendelevium Mercury Molybdenum Neodymium Neon Neptunium Nickel Niobium Nitrogen Nobelium Osmium Oxygen Palladium Phosphorus Platinum Plutonium Polonium Potassium Praseodymium Promethium Protactinium Radium Radon Rhenium Rhodium Rubidium Ruthenium Rutherfordium Samarium Scandium Seaborgium Selenium Silicon Silver Sodium Strontium Sulphur Tantalum Technetium Tellurium Terbium Thallium Thorium Thulium TinTitanium Tungsten Ununbium Ununnilium Ununumium Uranium Vanadium Xenon Ytterbium Yttrium Zinc Zirconium

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars rating1.9K Total Reviews
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5 out of 5 stars rating
By Annie B.29 May 2023Verified Purchase
Zazzle Reviewer Program
Good quality t-shirt, I didn't expect too much but it's good quality, matched the invites for my sons party and he absolutely loved opening this on his big day. Went straight to school with it, too! Print looks very good, vibrant colours, washing very well, too. I don't tumble dry tshirts so can't comment on that. Lovely idea for a birthday child!
Original product
5 out of 5 stars rating
By N.15 March 2018Verified Purchase
Kids Basic T-Shirt, White, Youth XS
Zazzle Reviewer Program
T shirt is amazing, good material and nice printing They have good customer service as well. I definitely recommend this company. its a bit pricey compare to others but it worth it. is great, is better than I expected
5 out of 5 stars rating
By c.19 December 2014Verified Purchase
Kids Basic T-Shirt, Sapphire, Youth S
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strong soft cotton, lovely colour just a shade brighter than picture (better), good print, a bit of fun. image perfectly printed, no messy bits, very clean and clear.

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Product ID: 235353752632994762
Created on 15/01/2013, 7:09
Rating: G