Submitted by sapphics4satan t3_1170s3h in askscience
Imagining a time where one couldn’t simply reference the periodic table, how would scientists have determined that something such as gold, once smelted and purified, was just one element, as opposed to being a compound?
Water was thought of as classical element and of course we know now that it’s made of hydrogen and oxygen. I can imagine how we might figure that out by either combining the elements that make water or breaking water up into its elements, but how could we have been certain back in the day that substances like gold were elements and not just compounds that are really hard to break apart? Could we really have been completely certain of this before we had the technology to directly observe individual atoms?
This might be a bit more of a history question. Google didn’t give me any satisfactory answers, I don’t think it really understood the question I was trying to ask.
baggier t1_j9c9ai7 wrote
Back in the day the key was weights. If two things combine to give a new substance that is heavier (say iron + oxygen to iron oxide) then it is obviously a compound. If a substance cleanly decomposes to two new substances, then the new substances are simpler and might be elements (say hydrogen peroxide to oxygen and water). After building up lots of these reaction it became clear that some things (e.g carbon) couldnt be decomposed into anything simpler and must be an element.