Technetium: Difference between revisions

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To find the numerical value of the half-life of any isotope of technetium, see:<ref>[http://periodictable.com/Elements/043/data.html Technical data for Technetium].
To find the numerical value of the half-life of any isotope of technetium, see:<ref>[http://periodictable.com/Elements/043/data.html Technical data for Technetium].
*<font face="Gill Sans MT">Scroll down to "Nuclear Properties", find "Known Isotopes", click on symbol for any isotope to see its half-life as well other technical data for that isotope, including decay chains leading to and from the isotope.</font></ref>
*<font face="Gill Sans MT">Scroll down to "Nuclear Properties", find "Known Isotopes", click on symbol for any isotope to see its half-life as well other technical data for that isotope, including decay chains leading to and from the isotope.</font></ref>
<ref name=isotcjlab>[http://education.jlab.org/itselemental/iso043.html Isotopes of  the Element Technetium]. Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Laboratory. | Gives mass number, half-life, decay mode, and branching percentage. | See also: [http://www.nndc.bnl.gov/ National Nuclear Data Center].</ref>


==References==
==References==


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{{reflist}}

Revision as of 22:02, 2 May 2011

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Technetium
98.9062



  Tc
43
1s22s22p63s23p63d104s2 4p64d55s2
[ ? ] Transition metal:
Properties:
Silvery-gray, crystalline metal.


Technetium is a chemical element, having the chemical symbol Tc. Its atomic number (the number of protons) is 43. It has a standard atomic weight of 98.9062 g•mol −1 and is a solid in its elemental form.

Technetium is considered to be a member of the "Transition metal" class of elements.[1] At a pressure of 101.325 kPa, it has a boiling point of 4,265 °C and a melting point of 2,157 °C.

All the isotopes of technetium are radioactive; 98 is the atomic mass of technetium's longest-lived isotope, 98Tc (4.12x106 years).[2] Technetium has the lowest atomic number of the chemical elements that lack a stable isotope.

Only very small amounts of technetium are found in nature.[3] Practically all technetium is produced synthetically as a by-product of the fission of uranium-235 in nuclear reactors and it is extracted from the spent reactor fuel rods.[4]

Technetium radioisotope half-lives

(PD) Diagram: U.S. Department of Energy, Brookhaven National Laboratory


To find the numerical value of the half-life of any isotope of technetium, see:[5] [6]

References

  1. Note: Technitium is also sometimes referred to being a member of a Synthetic or Quasi-synthetic class of elements.
  2. Technetium Isotope data.
  3. Schwochau K. (2000) Technetium: chemistry and radiopharmaceutical applications. Wiley-VCH. ISBN 9783527294961. | Google Books preview.
    • See section 3.2 for history of discovery of technetium in Earth's crust.
  4. John Elmsley (2001). Nature's Building Blocks: An A-Z Guide to the Elements, 1st Edition. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-850341-5. 
  5. Technical data for Technetium.
    • Scroll down to "Nuclear Properties", find "Known Isotopes", click on symbol for any isotope to see its half-life as well other technical data for that isotope, including decay chains leading to and from the isotope.
  6. Isotopes of the Element Technetium. Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Laboratory. | Gives mass number, half-life, decay mode, and branching percentage. | See also: National Nuclear Data Center.