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Half-Life of

Set up a scintillation counter to count P. This procedure was described for C and H above. [Pg.129]

Equilibrate the vial in the counter for 30 minutes and then count the vial for 1-5 minutes. [Pg.129]

Note the time of day and repeat step 3-84 at the same time every third day for approximately 4 to 6 weeks. [Pg.129]


The C exchanges with C in living organisms, but exchange ceases on death. The radioactive content decays with a half-life of 5730 years. Hence the age of a once living material may be established by determining the amount of C. [Pg.81]

For trace quantities of less than 100 ppm, the most successful method — and the most costly— is neutron activation. The sample is subjected to neutron bombardment in an accelerator where oxygen 16 is converted to unstable nitrogen 16 having a half-life of seven seconds. This is accompanied by emission of (J and 7 rays which are detected and measured. Oxygen concentrations as low as 10 ppm can be detected. At such levels, the problem is to find an acceptable blank sample. [Pg.30]

Carbon has seven isotopes. In 1961 the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry adopted the isotope carbon-12 as the basis for atomic weights. Carbon-14, an isotope with a half-life of 5715 years, has been widely used to date such materials as wood, archaeological specimens, etc. [Pg.16]

Seventeen isotopes of potassium are known. Ordinary potassium is composed of three isotopes, one of which is 40oK (0.0118%), a radioactive isotope with a half-life of 1.28 x IO9 years. [Pg.46]

Natural vanadium is a mixture of two isotopes, 50V (0.24%) and 51V (99.76%). 50V is slightly radioactive, having a half-life of > 3.9 x 10i7 years. Nine other unstable isotopes are recognized. [Pg.72]

Thirty isotopes are recognized. Only one stable isotope, 1271 is found in nature. The artificial radioisotope 1311, with a half-life of 8 days, has been used in treating the thyroid gland. The most common compounds are the iodides of sodium and potassium (KI) and the iodates (KIOs). Lack of iodine is the cause of goiter. [Pg.122]

Polonium-210 is a low-melting, fairly volatile metal, 50% of which is vaporized in air in 45 hours at 55C. It is an alpha emitter with a half-life of 138.39 days. A milligram emits as many alpha particles as 5 g of radium. [Pg.148]

Twenty isotopes are known. Radon-22, from radium, has a half-life of 3.823 days and is an alpha emitter Radon-220, emanating naturally from thorium and called thoron, has a half-life of 55.6 s and is also an alpha emitter. Radon-219 emanates from actinium and is called actinon. It has a half-life of 3.96 s and is also an alpha emitter. It is estimated that every square mile of soil to a depth of 6 inches contains about 1 g of radium, which releases radon in tiny amounts into the atmosphere. Radon is present in some spring waters, such as those at Hot Springs, Arkansas. [Pg.152]

In 1964, workers at the Joint Nuclear Research Institute at Dubna (U.S.S.R.) bombarded plutonium with accelerated 113 to 115 MeV neon ions. By measuring fission tracks in a special glass with a microscope, they detected an isotope that decays by spontaneous fission. They suggested that this isotope, which had a half-life of 0.3 +/- 0.1 s might be 260-104, produced by the following reaction 242Pu + 22Ne —> 104 +4n. [Pg.158]

New data, reportedly issued by Soviet scientists, have reduced the half-life of the isotope they worked with from 0.3 to 0.15 s. The Dubna scientists suggest the name kurchatauium and symbol Ku for element 104, in honor of Igor Vasilevich Kurchatov (1903-1960), former Head of Soviet Nuclear Research. [Pg.158]

The discoveries at Berkeley were made by bombarding a target of 249Cf with 12C nuclei of 71 MeV, and 13C nuclei of 69 MeV. The combination of 12C with 249Cf followed by instant emission of four neutrons produced Element 257-104. This isotope has a half-life of 4 to 5 s. [Pg.158]

The same reaction, except with the emission of three neutrons, was thought to have produced 258-104 with a half-life of about 1/100 s. [Pg.159]

Element 259-104 is formed by the merging of a 13C nuclei with 249Cf, followed by emission of three neutrons. This isotope has a half-life of 3 to 4 s, and decays by emitting an alpha particle into 255No, which has a half-life of 185 s. [Pg.159]

Element 106 was created by the reaction 249Gf(180,4N)263X, which decayed by alpha emission to rutherfordium, and then by alpha emission to nobelium, which in turn further decayed by alpha between daughter and granddaughter. The element so identified had alpha energies of 9.06 and 9.25 MeV with a half-life of 0.9 +/- 0.2 s. [Pg.162]

At Dubna, 280-MeV ions of 54Gr from the 310-cm cyclotron were used to strike targets of 206Pb, 207Pb, and 208Pb, in separate runs. Foils exposed to a rotating target disc were used to detect spontaneous fission activities. The foils were etched and examined microscopically to detect the number of fission tracks and the half-life of the fission activity. [Pg.162]

The acceptance of the name was premature because both Russian and American efforts now completely rule out the possibility of any isotope of Element 102 having a half-life of 10 min in the vicinity of 8.5 MeV. Early work in 1957 on the search for this element, in Russia at the Kurchatov Institute, was marred by the assignment of 8.9 +/- 0.4 MeV alpha radiation with a half-life of 2 to 40 sec, which was too indefinite to support discovery claims. [Pg.163]

Ten isotopes are now recognized, one of which — 255-102 — has a half-life of 3 minutes. [Pg.163]

Searches for the element on earth have been fruitless, and it now appears that promethium is completely missing from the earth s crust. Promethium, however, has been identified in the spectrum of the star HR465 in Andromeda. This element is being formed recently near the star s surface, for no known isotope of promethium has a half-life longer than 17.7 years. Seventeen isotopes of promethium, with atomic masses from 134 to 155 are now known. Promethium-147, with a half-life of 2.6 years, is the most generally useful. Promethium-145 is the longest lived, and has a specific activity of 940 Ci/g. [Pg.183]

By far of greatest importance is the isotope Pu2sy with a half-life of 24,100 years, produced in extensive quantities in nuclear reactors from natural uranium 23su(n, gamma) —> 239U—(beta) —> 239Np—(beta) —> 239pu. Fifteen isotopes of plutonium are known. [Pg.204]

Sixteen isotopes of fermium are known to exist. 257Fm, with a half-life of about 100.5 days, is the longest lived. 250Fm, with a half-life of 30 minutes, has been shown to be a decay product of element 254-102. Chemical identification of 250Fm confirmed the production of element 102 (nobelium). [Pg.212]

Dmitri Mendeleev) Mendelevium, the ninth transuranium element of the actinide series discovered, was first identified by Ghiorso, Harvey, Choppin, Thompson, and Seaborg in early in 1955 during the bombardment of the isotope 253Es with helium ions in the Berkeley 60-inch cyclotron. The isotope produced was 256Md, which has a half-life of 76 min. This first identification was notable in that 256Md was synthesized on a one-atom-at-a-time basis. [Pg.214]

Fourteen isotopes are now recognized. 258Md has a half-life of 2 months. This isotope has been produced by the bombardment of an isotope of einsteinium with ions of helium. Eventually enough 258Md should be made to determine its physical properties. [Pg.214]

Ernest O. Lawrence, inventor of the cyclotron) This member of the 5f transition elements (actinide series) was discovered in March 1961 by A. Ghiorso, T. Sikkeland, A.E. Larsh, and R.M. Latimer. A 3-Mg californium target, consisting of a mixture of isotopes of mass number 249, 250, 251, and 252, was bombarded with either lOB or IIB. The electrically charged transmutation nuclei recoiled with an atmosphere of helium and were collected on a thin copper conveyor tape which was then moved to place collected atoms in front of a series of solid-state detectors. The isotope of element 103 produced in this way decayed by emitting an 8.6 MeV alpha particle with a half-life of 8 s. [Pg.215]

In 1967, Flerov and associates at the Dubna Laboratory reported their inability to detect an alpha emitter with a half-life of 8 s which was assigned by the Berkeley group to 257-103. This assignment has been changed to 258Lr or 259Lr. [Pg.215]

In 1965, the Dubna workers found a longer-lived lawrencium isotope, 256Lr, with a half-life of 35 s. In 1968, Thiorso and associates at Berkeley used a few atoms of this isotope to study the oxidation behavior of lawrencium. Using solvent extraction techniques and working very rapidly, they extracted lawrencium ions from a buffered aqueous solution into an organic solvent — completing each extraction in about 30 s. [Pg.215]

Evidence from the viscosities, densities, refractive indices and measurements of the vapour pressure of these mixtures also supports the above conclusions. Acetyl nitrate has been prepared from a mixture of acetic anhydride and dinitrogen pentoxide, and characterised, showing that the equilibria discussed do lead to the formation of that compound. The initial reaction between nitric acid and acetic anhydride is rapid at room temperature nitric acid (0-05 mol 1 ) is reported to be converted into acetyl nitrate with a half-life of about i minute. This observation is consistent with the results of some preparative experiments, in which it was found that nitric acid could be precipitated quantitatively with urea from solutions of it in acetic anhydride at —10 °C, whereas similar solutions prepared at room temperature and cooled rapidly to — 10 °C yielded only a part of their nitric acid ( 5.3.2). The following equilibrium has been investigated in detail ... [Pg.80]

In addition to the initial reaction between nitric acid and acetic anhydride, subsequent changes lead to the quantitative formation of tetranitromethane in an equimolar mixture of nitric acid and acetic anhydride this reaction was half completed in 1-2 days. An investigation of the kinetics of this reaction showed it to have an induction period of 2-3 h for the solutions examined ([acetyl nitrate] = 0-7 mol 1 ), after which the rate adopted a form approximately of the first order with a half-life of about a day, close to that observed in the preparative experiment mentioned. In confirmation of this, recent workers have found the half-life of a solution at 25 °C of 0-05 mol 1 of nitric acid to be about 2 days. ... [Pg.81]

At this temperature, and provided that the concentration of acetic acid in the acetic anhydride was small, the conversion of nitric acid into acetyl nitrate would have had a half-life of 7-10 min. The description of the experimental method makes it clear that the solutions used by Dewar in this work contained acetyl nitrate over the vast majority of the reaction. Therefore it must be supposed that in this... [Pg.92]

The activation energy for cyclohexane ring inversion is 45 kJ/mol (10 8 kcal/mol) It IS a very rapid process with a half life of about 10 s at 25°C... [Pg.119]


See other pages where Half-Life of is mentioned: [Pg.126]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.345]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.102]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.175]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.154]   


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