Saturday, October 12, 2019
Plutonium :: essays research papers
 Plutonium      à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Plutonium is a radioactive metallic element. Although it is occasionally  found in nature, mostly all of our plutonium is produced artificially in a lab.  The official chemical symbol for plutonium is Pu, coming from its first and  third letters. Its atomic number is ninety-four. Plutonium is able to maintain  its solid state until very high temperatures, melting at six hundred and forty  degrees Celsius, and boiling at three thousand four hundred and sixty degrees.  The density of Plutonium, at twenty degrees centigrade, is 19.86 grams per cubic  centimeter.  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Plutonium was discovered, in the laboratory, by Glenn Theodore Seaborg,  and his associate Edward M. McMillan. The two shared the Nobel prize in 1951  for their discoveries of Plutonium, Americium (Am), Curium (Cm), Berkelium (Bk),  and Californium (Cf). In addition, Seaborg later contributed to the discovery  of three more radioactive elements, Einsteinium (Es), Mendelevium (Md), and  Nobelium (No). Plutonium was Seaborgââ¬â¢s first discovery. Its name came from  Pluto, the planet after Neptune for which Neptunium was named. In 1940, at the  University of California at Berkeley, he bombarded a sample of Uranium with  deuterons, the nuclei in atoms of deuterium, transmuting it into plutonium.  Shortly after, Seaborg was able to isolate plutonium 239, an isotope used in  atomic bombs.  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Plutonium is a highly dangerous and poisonous element because it rapidly  gives off radiation in the form of alpha particles. Alpha particles, which are  identical to the nucleus of a helium atom, consist of two protons and two  neutrons tightly bound together. Although the particles can only travel about  five centimeters in the air, they can cause great damage when the enter the body,  causing cancer and other serious health problems. Beyond the danger of their  radiation, Plutonium will spontaneously explode when a certain amount, called  critical mass, is kept together. Soon after the discovery of Plutonium, it was  discovered that at least two oxidation states existed. It is now known to exist  in oxidation states of +3, +4, +5, and +6.  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Currently, there are fifteen known isotopes of Plutonium, with mass  numbers ranging between 232 and 246. The most important isotope is plutonium 239,  or Pu-239. When struck by a neutron, this isotope undergoes a process called  fission. In fission, When struck by a neutron, the nucleus of the plutonium atom  is split into two nearly equal parts, and energy is released. Although the  energy released by one atom is not much, the splitting of the nucleus releases  more neutrons, which strike more plutonium atoms. This process, called a chain-  reaction, produces enormous amounts of energy. This energy is often used to  power nuclear reactors, or to provide the energy for nuclear weapons.  					    
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