Thallium is a chemical element with symbol
Tl and atomic number 81. This soft gray
post-transition metal is not found free in nature. When isolated, it resembles
tin, but discolors when exposed to air. Chemists
William Crookes and
Claude-Auguste Lamy discovered thallium independently in 1861, in residues of
sulfuric acid production. Both used the newly developed method of
flame spectroscopy, in which thallium produces a notable green spectral line. Thallium, from
Greek , , meaning "a green shoot or twig," was named by Crookes. It was isolated by both Lamy and Crookes in 1862; Lamy by electrolysis and Crookes by precipitation and melting of the resultant powder. Crookes exhibited it as a powder precipitated by Zinc at the International exhibition which opened on the first of May, that year.