I'm not sure that it's been created yet.
Name: MeitneriumSymbol: MtAtomic number: 109Atomic weight: [ 276 ]
Elements: iron, nickel, uranium, astatine, lanthanum and the others up the atomic number 118. Fot the applications hundred of volumes can be writed !
Dmitri Mendeleev published the first periodic table in 1869. He built on the work of several other scientists, including Antoine Lavoisier, Johann Dobereiner, Alexandre-Emile Beguyer de Chancourtois, and John Newlands, who had previously studied the best way to classify the elements.
No. There are only a hundred or so naturally occurring elements from which many, millions of compounds are made. A compound is a combination of two or more elements. There are far more compounds than there are elements.
The 102nd element is called Nobelium (No).
Mendelevium (Md).
There is no permanent name for the 113th element, but its temporary name is Ununtrium (Uut).
To be frank, there is no 114th element and the element Ununquadium as posted before doesn't even exist.
bohrium, Bh. See related link.
seaborgium, Sg. See related link.
I'm not sure that it's been created yet.
Name: RoentgeniumSymbol: RgAtomic number: 111Atomic weight: [ 280 ]
Name: LawrenciumSymbol: LrAtomic number: 103Atomic weight: [ 262 ]
Name: MeitneriumSymbol: MtAtomic number: 109Atomic weight: [ 276 ]
That stands for "One hundred eight Elements in the Periodic Table", but this is now obsolete. As of 2008, at least 117 elements have been discovered.
This describes an element. There are over a hundred elements in the physical world, and they are all categorized in the periodic table.