The world ash tree of the computer hardware industry… crystalline silicon from 1854.

The element silicon best represents the digital era of the mid 20th century to the present; without its crystalline form, there would be no computers (or this blog). Although it was first prepared in pure amorphous (powder) form around 1823[1] by Berzelius, it was not until 1854 that Henri Sainte-Claire Deville made it in crystalline form, using metallic aluminium to isolate it. He described it [1] as having a “metallic luster”.

Well, an actual sample of his silicon has survived since he prepared it in 1854,‡ and so this tiny crystal could reasonably be argued to constitute the origin of the modern computer hardware industry.

It is worth juxtaposing this on a modern sample of the element (below). There is indeed a metallic luster (Deville’s sample is about 2mm in size, did I imagine it too having a luster?). Oh, the artist in me came out when I photographed the below. The red tinge is because I illuminated the crystals with light from a neon tube (an original sample does still exist at University College London, not more than a few km from where I write this blog).

And your powers of observation do not have to be finely honed to spot another truly original elemental sample above the silicon. This one is even older, dating (as the caption says) back to 1826 and its discovery in that year by Antoine Balard.

Original element samples, by definition, are both finite and rare. The Royal Institution in London (again just down the road from where I am) has perhaps the largest collection of mainstream elements (groups I and II) prepared by Davy there, but there is no catalogue I am aware of which lists all the original elemental samples still existing and their location in the world. I suspect the majority are no longer around. But I would welcome anyone who knows of the location of such to post a comment, perchance even a photo, here.


The provenance is impeccable. Potassium (1807), sodium, barium, calcium, magnesium, strontium and boron. See here for photos of modern samples.


References

  1. "The discovery of the elements. XII. Other elements isolated with the aid of potassium and sodium: Beryllium, boron, silicon, and aluminum", @ACHS, 1932. http://doi.org/10.1021/ed009p1386
Henry Rzepa

Henry Rzepa is Emeritus Professor of Computational Chemistry at Imperial College London.

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  • I mentioned Berzelius as the discoverer of the element silicon. I might add he also discovered cerium, selenium and thorium. But not Yttrium. But here is a photo of a sample of yttrium phosphate (it was Wöhler who actually isolated the metal, in 1828) which appears to have passed through his hands.

    I include the photo here, since its attribution is to a Dr Fiedler, but its analysis was actually carried out by a J. Berzelius.

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