Like sodium, potassium is another metal famous for its reactivity; it is so active that it never occurs freely in nature, but only as compounds. This was why our ancestors did not know about the existence of this metal. Potassium was not known to the world until the 19th century.

The term potassium comes from potash. Early humans were familiar with potash, a compound of potassium that was formed when wood burns. Wood ash was washed with water to dissolve the potash. It was then recovered by evaporating the water. By the late I700’s, chemists were reasonably sure that potash contained elements they had never seen. They tried to think of ways to break potash down into its elements. However, it was the English chemist Sir Humphry Davy who finally found a way to make potassium from potash.

In 1807, Humphry Davy prepared potassium in its pure form for the first time in the world. He was using his newly invented method of isolating elements, known as electrolysis. In electrolysis, electric current is passed through a molten or melted compound which breaks the compound into its elements.

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