Moscovium: the 115th element

Soheil_Esy

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August 24, 2015

Later this year the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) might recognize a new element of the periodic table with the atomic number 115. This element, which pervades science fiction and some conspiracy theories, could be named moscovium in honor of Russia’s capital.

Scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna near Moscow hope the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) will accept their discovery of the periodic table’s 115th element by the end of this year.

The 115th element was temporarily called ununpentium, which is Latin for one-one-five, and scientists will be able to give it a permanent name only when the discovery is officially recognized by the IUPAC.

“We might call it moscovium – in honor of the Russian capital, but that’s just one of the possible names,” Andrei Popeko, deputy director of the Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions at JINR, told RBTH.

The magic element: what’s important about it?

The new element’s nucleus contains 115 protons and neutrons. It is a super-heavy substance, and therefore one of the last ones in the periodic table. The element, Popeko noted, can be created on Earth only in a particle accelerator, and only one atom per week.

On Earth we know of just 98 elements that occur naturally. Some of them are very unstable and found in extremely small amounts. Those elements that come before fermium (atomic number 100) can be obtained in nuclear reactors, while the heavier elements are synthesized in particles accelerators.

According to Popeko, it’s possible that element 115 can be found in space. And while the element exists in the laboratory for about a tenth of a second, the isotopes in the universe may be long-lived.

“The discovery of this element is important for the understanding of the processes occurring in the universe,” Popeko said.

Human-created elements can also help to develop a better model of the atomic nucleus.

“All current models are incomplete,’’ Popeko noted. “In order to understand the atomic nucleus, we need to move away from the well-known."Element 115 pervades science fiction, video games, and conspiracy theories because scientists theorize that some isotopes of this element may exist on the so-called Island of Stability. The theory is that if we can cram in a certain “magic number” of protons and neutrons, these elements will suddenly become very stable.

Running out of names and elements

Element 115 was originally created by Russian scientists in 2004. For an element to be officially discovered, however, a second group must replicate the work, which is what scientists at Lund University in Sweden did in 2013.

In addition to element 115, the scientists at JINR claim priority for the discovery of three more elements – 118, 117 and 113.

The discovery of element 113, however, is debatable since researchers at RIKEN Nishina Center in Japan claim they made the discovery. The Russian scientists created a similar element in an experiment to produce atoms of element 115. However, they were so far unable to prove their right to priority due to the lack of a proper explanation for element 113’s decay chain.

Researchers at the Center for Heavy Ion Research (GSI) in Germany, GANIL in France and many others are also working to discover new elements of the periodic table with numbers between 119 and 126. However, the researchers in Dubna believe that’s going to be difficult.

“Even though we are building a special accelerator,’’ said Popeko, “most likely element 118 will be the last one discovered because the process is more and more complicated and very expensive.’’

http://rbth.co.uk/science_and_tech/2015/08/24/the_115th_element_whats_in_a_name_48705.html
 

Andy44

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I was thinking they need to name one "turbonium" like in the Volkswagon commercials. And it has to be pronounced in English with a Russian accent, just like the commercial, or it won't sound right.
 

kamaz

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Experiments in both Dubna and Darmstadt use detectors made in Poland to analyze decay products:

http://www.ite.waw.pl/docs/en/others/GSI_Element_114_at_TASCA_Poster_small.pdf

http://press.ite.waw.pl/pdf/2012/ITE120529a_-_Silicon_strip_detectors.pdf

ITE140505b_fot01.jpg
 

Soheil_Esy

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Lawrencium experiment could shake up periodic table

9 April 2015

N%26V-lawrencium-2_630m.jpg

Size of first ionisation energies for the elements

Lawrencium’s position on the periodic table may now be up for debate after scientists in Japan successfully measured the first ionisation potential of the synthetic f-block element. The result may provide fuel for arguments that lawrencium and its close cousin, lutetium, should be considered part of the central d-block.

Named after Ernest Lawrence, the famed nuclear scientist, lawrencium was first produced in 1961 by bombarding a small californium target with boron atoms and is now one of the superheavy elements occupying the actinide series. But the family of laboratory-made elements are notoriously difficult to produce in large amounts, with lawrencium being one of the most cantankerous.

‘We cannot get a weighable amount of lawrencium,’ states Yuichiro Nagame from the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA). According to Nagame, researchers can only produce one lawrencium atom every few seconds and, once they do, its lifetime is very brief – it has a half-life of just 27 seconds.

These production rates are in stark contrast to other superheavy elements such as fermium, where researchers have been able to produce millions of atoms over a reasonable timescale. ‘This is a very difficult situation for experimentalists,’ comments Nagame.

But the JAEA team were able to overcome this obstacle by applying a surface ionisation technique. Producing lawrencium atoms via the same process used to discover it, Nagame and his colleagues captured the element in a helium and cadmium iodide gas. The gas was quickly passed through to a heated tantalum surface that gave the lawrencium sufficient energy to shed its outer electron. The freshly-produced ions were subsequently passed through a mass analyser in order to calculate the first ionisation potential, which the team measured to be 4.96eV – this is in excellent agreement with the predicted value of 4.963eV.

Such a result confirms that lawrencium has the lowest first ionisation potential of all of the known f-block elements. It also reaffirms its proposed electronic configuration, which theorists have suggested has a weakly-bound valence electron in a dumbbell -shaped p-orbital.

This work may now lead researchers to reassess lawrencium’s position on the periodic table, as it suggests the actinide may behave in a similar fashion to elements such as sodium and potassium, as well as d-block elements. ‘[Lutetium and lawrencium] – the last column of lanthanides and actinides – could be put into the group III column of the periodic table, under scandium and yttrium,’ says Nagame.

Irrespective of the debate this research will help to ignite, Sebastian Rothe from CERN in Switzerland believes it’s an important development: ‘I think it’s a great result – especially because it is on a very exotic element that is artificially produced.’

http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/2015/04/lawrencium-experiment-could-shake-periodic-table
 

Notebook

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Now, he looks like a chemistry professor!

N.
 

Artlav

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Now, he looks like a chemistry professor!
Sir Martyn Poliakoff, a research professor at the University of Nottingham.
Seems legit to me...
 

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Watch all of "his" videos @ http://www.periodicvideos.com/
and you will definitely trust almost anything he says/does ;)
Those videos are really great. I periodically :)lol:) took that page up to see what news videos they've done. It never was a waste of time.
 
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