13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | B Boron |
C Carbon |
N Nitrogen |
O Oxygen |
F Fluorine | |
3 | Al Aluminium |
Si Silicon |
P Phosphorus |
S Sulfur |
Cl Chlorine | |
4 | Ga Gallium |
Ge Germanium |
As Arsenic |
Se Selenium |
Br Bromine | |
5 | In Indium |
Sn Tin |
Sb Antimony |
Te Tellurium |
I Iodine | |
6 | Tl Thallium |
Pb Lead |
Bi Bismuth |
Po Polonium |
At Astatine | |
Commonly recognized (86–99%): B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te
Irregularly recognized (40–49%): Po, At
Less commonly recognized (24%): Se
Rarely recognized (8–10%): C, Al
(All other elements cited in less than 6% of sources)
Arbitrary metal-nonmetal dividing line: between Be and B, Al and Si, Ge and As, Sb and Te, Po and At
| ||||||
Recognition status, as metalloids, of some elements in the p-block of the periodic table. Percentages are median appearance frequencies in the lists of metalloids.[n 1] The staircase-shaped line is a typical example of the arbitrary metal–nonmetal dividing line found on some periodic tables. |
References
- ^ For a related commentary see also: Vernon RE 2013, 'Which Elements Are Metalloids?', Journal of Chemical Education, vol. 90, no. 12, pp. 1703–1707, doi:10.1021/ed3008457
Usage
editSetting parameter |addnotes=no
hides the verbose explanation.
Technical
editLegend colors used:
- Colors used
{{element color|Metalloid citeclass 1 of 4}}
→ #baffba (93%){{element color|Metalloid citeclass 2 of 4}}
→ #badcff (44%){{element color|Metalloid citeclass 3 of 4}}
→ #ffbadc (24%){{element color|Metalloid citeclass 4 of 4}}
→ #ffffba (9%)
- The colors are calculated through HSV:
- H-S-V: H-65-240 for all (1/240 scale)
- H: gr/bl/rd/ye = 80/140/220/40