Synthesis of Transuranium Elements
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2-2-2019
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Synthesis of Transuranium Elements
Uranium (Z = 92) is the heaviest naturally occurring element. Consequently, all the elements with Z > 92, the transuranium elementsAn artificial element that has been prepared by bombarding suitable target nuclei with smaller particles., are artificial and have been prepared by bombarding suitable target nuclei with smaller particles. The first of the transuranium elements to be prepared was neptunium (Z = 93), which was synthesized in 1940 by bombarding a 238U target with neutrons. As shown in below this reaction occurs in two steps. Initially, a neutron combines with a 238U nucleus to form 239U, which is unstable and undergoes beta decay to produce 239Np:
10n+23892U→23992U→23993Np+0−1β
Subsequent beta decay of 239Np produces the second transuranium element, plutonium (Z = 94):
Bombarding the target with more massive nuclei creates elements that have atomic numbers significantly greater than that of the target nucleus (Table 1.1).
Table 1.1 Some Reactions Used to Synthesize Transuranium Elements
| 23994Pu+42α→24296Cm+10n |
| 23994Pu+42α→24195Am+11p+10n |
| 24296Cm+42α→24397Bk+11p+2 10n |
| 23892U+126C→24698Cf+4 10n |
| 25298Cf+105B→256103Lr+6 10n |
A device called a particle accelerator is used to accelerate positively charged particles to the speeds needed to overcome the electrostatic repulsions between them and the target nuclei by using electrical and magnetic fields. Operationally, the simplest particle accelerator is the linear accelerator (Figure 1.1), in which a beam of particles is injected at one end of a long evacuated tube. Rapid alternation of the polarity of the electrodes along the tube causes the particles to be alternately accelerated toward a region of opposite charge and repelled by a region with the same charge, resulting in a tremendous acceleration as the particle travels down the tube. A modern linear accelerator such as the Stanford Linear Accelerator (SLAC) at Stanford University is about 2 miles long.
To achieve the same outcome in less space, a particle accelerator called a cyclotron forces the charged particles to travel in a circular path rather than a linear one. The particles are injected into the center of a ring and accelerated by rapidly alternating the polarity of two large D-shaped electrodes above and below the ring, which accelerates the particles outward along a spiral path toward the target.
The length of a linear accelerator and the size of the D-shaped electrodes in a cyclotron severely limit the kinetic energy that particles can attain in these devices. These limitations can be overcome by using a synchrotron, a hybrid of the two designs. A synchrotron contains an evacuated tube similar to that of a linear accelerator, but the tube is circular and can be more than a mile in diameter . Charged particles are accelerated around the circle by a series of magnets whose polarities rapidly alternate.
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