Showing posts with label radium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radium. Show all posts

February 23 - Plutonium Day

Posted on February 23, 2020

A few radioactive elements are pretty famous:

Radium - Atomic # 88 - the element discovered by Marie and Pierre Curie (and one of the big contributors to Marie Curie's death!)




Uranium - Atomic # 92 - probably the first radioactive element ever discovered, and the one used in the first nuclear weapon used in war




Plutonium - Atomic # 94 - first produced, isolated, and identified on this date in 1941, by Glenn T. Seaborg and a team of scientists at the University of California, Berkeley. 

The scientists produced plutonium by bombarding uranium with "heavy hydrogen" - the form of hydrogen that has one proton plus one neutron (rather than just a proton).



Actually, when the scientists smashed heavy hydrogen into atoms of uranium in the particle accelerator, the first radioactive element that formed was NOT plutonium. Instead, neptunium was formed. Neptunium is Atomic #93.

The atomic numbers I've been giving is the number of protons each element has. The number of protons is the essential factor that makes each element what it is. You can kind of see how scientists formed new elements by hurling a proton-neutron combination at it. With enough speed, the proton and neutron of the heavy hydrogen enters the nucleus of the uranium and then "sticks" - and now the element has one more proton and is no longer uranium! It's neptunium.

   In other words: U (92 protons)
                            + heavy hydrogen (1 proton, 1 neutron)
                            = Np (93 protons)

So how does the neptunium turn into plutonium?

Remember, the scientists bombarded the uranium with a proton AND a neutron; the result (neptunium) is an unstable element that fairly quickly - and all on its own, while just sitting around - "decays" or changes into another element. This change is caused by the extra neutron releasing a beta particle and thus transforming into a proton.

One extra proton changes the neptunium into plutonium!

    In other words: Np (93 protons)
                            1 neutron - beta particle = + 1 protron
                            = Pu (94 protons)

All radioactive elements are unstable; all of them decay into other elements by releasing either particles or radiation. That's what makes them radioactive! A chunk of iron or pile of sulphur that are just sitting around will never change into another element - that's what makes them NOT radioactive.

But there is a huge difference between how unstable different radioactive elements are. The thing we talk about to compare stability is an element's "half life" - which is the approximate amount of time it takes for half of the atoms in a sample to decay (change into another element).



Uranium is a relatively stable radioactive element. Its half life is about 4.5 BILLION years! It sticks around for a long, long time.

One really unstable element is francium. It has a half life of just 22 minutes. That means that roughly half of the atoms of a sample of francium will have transformed into either radium or astatine in just 22 minutes! Meitnerium has a half life of just 4 or 5 seconds. It's really, really unstable!

How do the half lives of neptunium and plutonium compare to uranium, francium, and meitnerium? Take a peek:

   U   - 4 billion years
   Pu - 88 years
   Np - 2 days
   Fr  - 22 minutes
   Mt  - 4 seconds

By the way, did you notice anything about these three element names:

   uranium

   neptunium
   plutonium

?

Uranium was named after the planet Uranus, which was discovered just a few years before the element was discovered and named.

When scientists were able to create new elements from uranium, they decided to name them after the planets Neptune and Pluto. Of course, since then Pluto got downgraded from "planet" to "dwarf planet."





December 26 – Marie and Pierre Curie Announce a Discovery

Posted December 26, 2013

For scientists, there is often a rush to publish findings before someone else does—a rush to announce a discovery, just in case someone else is working in the same area and about to discover the same thing!

On this date in 1898, Marie and Curie announced that (a mere five days earlier) they had isolated from a complex mineral called pitchblende an “active” element that they named radium.



What I mean by “active” is that pitchblende gives off radiation similar to X-rays. Two years earlier another scientist had discovered that uranium gives off such radiation, and uranium is definitely present in pitchblende. But the radiation from pitchblende is four times stronger than the radiation from uranium itself, Marie found, so she was certain that another, much more active element could also be found in the mineral.

And she was right! But it took quite a bit of time and labor to prove it and to isolate the tiny amounts of radium in the mineral. From a ton of pitchblende, only one-tenth of a gram (around 2/10,000ths of a pound) of radium could be collected!

Pitchblende
Learn more about radioactivity here

Learn more about radium here

Learn more about Marie Curie here. I must mention here that Curie is the first woman to win a Nobel prize, the only woman to win in two fields, and the only person to win in two different sciences (physics and chemistry)!


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