Respuesta :
I think the best answer among the choices is the last option. The work of Antoine Lavoisier inspired Mendeleev to create his organization for the elements. Antoine Lavoisier has a list of simple substances that he believed cannot be broken down into smaller particles. He initially classified substances into metals and nonmetals.
Answer:
The work of Antoine Lavoisier inspired Mendeleev to create his organization for the elements.
Explanation:
The first classification of known elements was prepared by the French chemist Antoine Lavoisier. This proposed that the elements are classified into metals, nonmetals and metalloids or transition metals, including the 33 elements known up to that time. Although it was very practical, it was rejected because there were many differences in both the physical and chemical properties of the grouped elements. But this was the basis for the following chemists, including Mendeleyev, to improve and organize the table of the elements, until reaching the one known today.
Then, different orderings according to different scientists appeared until in 1869, Mendeleyev published his periodic table. Mendeleyev based his organization of the elements according to his atomic mass, dividing by columns those that had something in common. The chemist altered the mass order when necessary to order them according to their properties and, guided by their intuition, left gaps for the possible existence of unknown elements until that moment.
Mendeleev's first order was not well accepted, but after several modifications, in 1872 he published his new Periodic Table, which was formed by eight columns divided into two groups each, which in later years were known as, family A and family B.
So, the work of Antoine Lavoisier inspired Mendeleev to create his organization for the elements.