ekasilicon
Ekasilicon is the historical name given by Dmitri Mendeleev to a then-unknown element he predicted would lie in the same group as silicon, but with a heavier atomic weight. In his periodic table, he envisioned an element beyond silicon that would behave as a metalloid with chemical properties similar to silicon. The term ekasilicon is best understood as a placeholder label for a future discovery that would complete the analogue of silicon in that portion of the periodic table.
In 1886, German chemist Clemens Winkler identified germanium, whose properties closely matched Mendeleev’s predictions for eka-silicon.
Today, the term ekasilicon is primarily of historical interest. It appears in discussions of the development