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Encyclopedia > Superheavy element


In chemistry, transuranium elements (also known as transuranic elements) are the chemical elements with atomic numbers greater than 92, the atomic number of Uranium.


Of the elements with atomic numbers 1 to 92, all but four (43-technetium, 61-promethium, 85-astatine, and 87-francium) occur in easily detectable quantities on earth, having stable, or very long half life isotopes, or are created as common products of the decay of Uranium.


All of the elements with higher atomic numbers, however, have been first discovered artificially, and other than plutonium and neptunium, none occur naturally on earth. They are all radioactive, with a half-life much shorter than the age of the Earth, so any atoms of these elements, if they ever were present at the earth's formation, have long since vanished, other than trace amounts of Neptunium and Plutonium formed in some Uranium rich rock, and small amounts which escaped atmospheric tests of atomic weapons. The Np and Pu generated are from spontaneous fission in uranium ore with two subsequent beta decays (U-238 → U-239 → Np-239 → Pu-239).


Those that can be found on earth now are artificially generated synthetic elements, via nuclear reactors or particle accelerators.


Transuranic elements that have not been discovered, or have been discovered but are not yet officially named, use IUPAC's systematic element names. The naming of transuranic elements is a source of controversy.

Contents

Discovery and naming of transuranium elements

The majority of the transuranium elements were produced by two groups:

  • A group at the University of California, Berkeley, under three different leaders:
  • A group at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (Society for Heavy Ion Research) in Darmstadt, Hessen, Germany, under Peter Armbruster, who prepared:
      • 107. bohrium, Bh, named after the Danish physicist Niels Bohr, important in the elucidation of the structure of the atom. The group had first suggested the name nielsbohrium, but the ultimately accepted name is bohrium.
      • 108. hassium, Hs, named after the Latin form of the name of Hesse, the German Bundesland where this work was performed.
      • 109. meitnerium, Mt, named after Lise Meitner, a German physicist who was one of the earliest scientists to become involved in the study of nuclear fission.
      • 110. darmstadtium, Ds named after Darmstadt, Germany. Where the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung is situated which discovered the element.
      • 111. roentgenium, Rg named after Wilhelm Roentgen, discoverer of the X-Ray
      • 112. This element has not yet been given a name.

Now-obsolete claims of discovery

Two other groups had worked on the preparation of transuranium elements, but their original reports have since been discredited:

  • A group at the Nobel Institute in Sweden, which claimed to have produced element 102, and named it nobelium, in honor of Alfred Nobel, inventor of dynamite and donor of the endowment for the Nobel Prizes. The name "nobelium" was ultimately agreed upon, though their production is no longer accepted.
  • A group at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna in Russia (then the Soviet Union) who claimed to have produced:
    • 104, which they named kurchatovium after the Soviet chemist Igor Kurchatov.
    • 105. Although their claim is not accepted, the name dubnium is now official for this element, named after the city where they worked. They originally proposed nielsbohrium for this.
    • 106. seaborgium
    • 107. bohrium

List of the transuranic elements:

93 neptunium Np
94 plutonium Pu
95 americium Am
96 curium Cm
97 berkelium Bk
98 californium Cf
99 einsteinium Es
100 fermium Fm
101 mendelevium Md
102 nobelium No
103 lawrencium Lr
104 rutherfordium Rf
105 dubnium Db
107 bohrium Bh
108 hassium Hs
109 meitnerium Mt
110 darmstadtium Ds
111 roentgenium Rg
112 ununbium Uub*
113 ununtrium Uut*
114 ununquadium Uuq*
115 ununpentium Uup*
116 ununhexium Uuh*


*The existence of these elements has not yet been confirmed. The names and symbols given are provisional.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
MSN Encarta - Elements (441 words)
Elements were at one time believed to be the fundamental substances but are now known to consist of a number of different elementary particles.
When the elements are arranged in the order of their atomic numbers (a number proportional to the net positive charge on the nucleus of an atom of an element), elements of similar physical and chemical properties occur at specific intervals (see Periodic Law).
These groups of elements with similar physical and chemical properties are called families, examples of which are the alkaline earth metals, rare earth elements, halogens, and the noble gases.
Transuranium element - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1018 words)
In chemistry, transuranium elements (also known as transuranic elements) are the chemical elements with atomic numbers greater than 92, the atomic number of uranium.
Of the elements with atomic numbers 1 to 92, all but four (43-technetium, 61-promethium, 85-astatine, and 87-francium) occur in easily detectable quantities on earth, having stable, or very long half life isotopes, or are created as common products of the decay of Uranium.
Transuranic elements that have not been discovered, or have been discovered but are not yet officially named, use IUPAC's systematic element names.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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