
Element Explorer
Interactive periodic table of 118 elements. Color-coded by category, filterable by phase and type. Click any element for detailed properties: atomic mass, density, melting/boiling points, electron configuration, and more.
About Element Explorer
Tap any element on the periodic table and instantly pull up the details that actually matter: atomic mass, density, electron configuration, melting and boiling points, and more. All 118 elements are color-coded by category, so alkali metals, noble gases, and transition metals each stand out at a glance. A phase filter lets you narrow the table down to solids, liquids, or gases at standard conditions — useful when you're working through a specific concept rather than browsing.
This is a strong companion for chemistry students who want something faster than a textbook and more precise than a search engine. It sits comfortably alongside other education apps built for reference and self-study. If the periodic table is one half of your toolkit, Graphing Calculator handles the math side when equations start showing up in your coursework.
Works best on a tablet or a wide desktop window — the full table layout is easiest to read without horizontal scrolling.
How to use
Click any element on the periodic table to view detailed information including atomic mass, electron configuration, and physical properties. • Use the search box to find specific elements by name or symbol • Filter elements by category (metals, nonmetals, etc.) or phase (solid, liquid, gas) using dropdown menus • Hover over elements to see them enlarge with a highlight effect • Click the colored legend at the bottom to filter by element categories • Elements that don't match your current filter will appear dimmed • Close element detail panels by clicking the close button or clicking outside the panel The table shows each element's atomic number, symbol, and name. Elements are color-coded by category - alkali metals in red, noble gases in purple, nonmetals in green, etc. Lanthanides and actinides appear in separate rows below the main table. Scroll or zoom if needed to view the full periodic table on smaller screens.
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