Mendeleev's original periodic table was published in the year 1869 and claimed the famous periodic law that “Element properties are a periodic function of their atomic weight”.
Mendeleev placed elements in the order of their atomic weights in the form of a table known as the Periodic table of Mendeleev.
Mendeleev tried to co-relate the atomic masses with their physical and chemical properties.
Arrangement of elements in the Mendeleev's periodic table
Elements with similar properties were found in the same vertical column. In a horizontal line, the elements are arranged in an increasing atomic mass value.
The horizontal rows are called a ‘period’, and the vertical columns are called a ‘group’.
The elements with similar properties were placed in the same group.
There are 8 groups indicated by Roman numbers I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, and VIII, and the elements belonging to the first seven groups have been divided into sub-groups designated as A and B on the basis of similarities in properties.
Noble gases could be easily placed in a separate group called the zero group (noble gas elements have zero valencies) without disturbing the main periodic table.
Many gaps were left in the periodic table for the undiscovered elements which were identified later on and were placed in their respective positions.