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Chemical characterization of element 112.

Authors :
Eichler R
Aksenov NV
Belozerov AV
Bozhikov GA
Chepigin VI
Dmitriev SN
Dressler R
Gäggeler HW
Gorshkov VA
Haenssler F
Itkis MG
Laube A
Lebedev VY
Malyshev ON
Oganessian YTs
Petrushkin OV
Piguet D
Rasmussen P
Shishkin SV
Shutov AV
Svirikhin AI
Tereshatov EE
Vostokin GK
Wegrzecki M
Yeremin AV
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2007 May 03; Vol. 447 (7140), pp. 72-5.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

The heaviest elements to have been chemically characterized are seaborgium (element 106), bohrium (element 107) and hassium (element 108). All three behave according to their respective positions in groups 6, 7 and 8 of the periodic table, which arranges elements according to their outermost electrons and hence their chemical properties. However, the chemical characterization results are not trivial: relativistic effects on the electronic structure of the heaviest elements can strongly influence chemical properties. The next heavy element targeted for chemical characterization is element 112; its closed-shell electronic structure with a filled outer s orbital suggests that it may be particularly susceptible to strong deviations from the chemical property trends expected within group 12. Indeed, first experiments concluded that element 112 does not behave like its lighter homologue mercury. However, the production and identification methods used cast doubt on the validity of this result. Here we report a more reliable chemical characterization of element 112, involving the production of two atoms of (283)112 through the alpha decay of the short-lived (287)114 (which itself forms in the nuclear fusion reaction of 48Ca with 242Pu) and the adsorption of the two atoms on a gold surface. By directly comparing the adsorption characteristics of (283)112 to that of mercury and the noble gas radon, we find that element 112 is very volatile and, unlike radon, reveals a metallic interaction with the gold surface. These adsorption characteristics establish element 112 as a typical element of group 12, and its successful production unambiguously establishes the approach to the island of stability of superheavy elements through 48Ca-induced nuclear fusion reactions with actinides.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
447
Issue :
7140
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17476264
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature05761