Periodic Table: Chemistry 2026

396.6K installs
7.9K ratings
+2.9K weekly installs
+7.8K monthly installs

Periodic Table: Chemistry 2026 Summary

Periodic Table: Chemistry 2026 is a iOS app in the Education category, developed by Nikita Chernykh. First released 7 years ago(Feb 2019), the app has 7.9K ratings with a 4.82★ (excellent) average rating.

Recent activity: 123 new ratings this week View trends →

Data tracking: SDKs and third-party integrations were last analyzed on Feb 5, 2026.

Store info: Last updated on App Store on Feb 5, 2026 (version 410).


4.82★

Ratings: 7.9K

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Screenshots

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App Description

▶ Why should you install this?
Chemistry isn’t school torture — it’s the language of the universe.
And if you still think chemistry is just boring tables, meaningless equations, and endless memorization, then no one ever really showed it to you the right way.
This app makes chemistry clear. Useful. Beautiful.
No boring lectures. No confusing terms. No ads.
Just facts, visuals, and respect for your time.

▶ Who is it for?
For students — to understand, not just memorize.
For university learners — to save time and stress.
For teachers — to keep everything essential within reach.
For chemists — to stop dealing with outdated, clunky websites.
For anyone curious about how the world really works.

▶ Why you’ll love it
• Interactive Periodic Table — flexible layout, filters, and color themes.
• Detailed Element Cards — from atomic data to symmetry and radioactivity.
• 3300+ Isotopes — searchable, filterable, and presented clearly.
• Molar Mass Calculator — handles even the most complex formulas.
• Chemistry Dictionary — short, precise, human-readable definitions.
• Reactions & Equations — with clear conditions and explanations.
• Favorites, notes, and comparison tools to organize your knowledge.
• Solubility chart, orbital models, graphs, and visual symmetry tools.
Everything you need — from the classroom to the lab.

Chemistry isn’t a dry science — it’s the language of matter.
And now, that language fits in your pocket — complete with all the glossaries and data about our universe.