96

Cm

Curium

247

Basic Information

Name

Curium

Atomic Number

96

Appearance

Silvery metallic, glows purple in the dark

Phase At STP

Solid

Spectrum Image

Spectrum image of Curium

Source

Wikipedia

Bohr Model

Static

A 2D model of Curium

Interactive

Descriptive Numbers

CAS Number

7440-51-9

Mendeleev Number

28

Pettifor Number

41

Space Group Number

194

Glawe Number

40

Mass

Atomic Mass

247 Da

Periodic Position

X Position

11

Y Position

9

Period

7

Group

N/A

Classification

Block

f

Category

Actinides

Goldschmidt

Synthetic

Color

Jmol

#785CE3

Molcas Gv

#785CE3

CPK

#FFFFFF

Atomic Radius

Empirical

176

Rahm

276

Uff

332.6

Alvarez

305

Covalent (Cordero)

169

Covalent (Pyykko)

166

Covalent (Pyykko Double)

136

Metallic

174

Temperature

Melting/Freeze (USE)

1613 °K

Melting/Freeze (WEL)

1613 °K

Melting/Freeze (CRC)

1618 °K

Melting/Freeze (LNG)

1613 °K

Boiling/Density (USE)

3383 °K

Boiling/Density (WEL)

3383 °K

Boiling/Density (CRC)

3373 °K

Boiling/Density (LNG)

3383 °K

Density

STP

13.51 kg/cm³

Solid (WEL)

13510 kg/cm³

Solid (CRC)

13510 kg/cm³

Solid (LNG)

13510 kg/cm³

Heat

Molar Volume

18.05 cm³/mol

Atomic Volume

18.28 cm³

Adiabatic Index

N/A

Electrical Resistance

293k

1250 nΩm

Etymology

Description

It is a transuranic, radioactive metal element. It is found in the actinides class. There are nine known isotopes. Cm-247 has a half-life of 1.64*10^7 years. It was first discovered by Glenn T. Seaborg and his colleagues in 1944, and was discovered by L.B. Seaborg in 1947. It was obtained by Werner and I. Perlman by bombarding americium-241 with neutrons. It was named after Marie Curie.

Origin Of Word

From physicist Pierre Curie, chemist and physicist Marie Curie. As with gadolinium, it is named after great scientists.

Meaning

Marie ve Pierre Curie

Symbol Origin

surname, eponym: Pierre and Marie Curie + -um suffix

Etymological Description

This name was given in honor of Marie and Pierre Curie, who discovered radium and conducted radioactivity research.

Discovery & Isolation

Observed/Predicted By

Glenn T. Seaborg, Ralph A. James ve Albert Ghiorso

Observed/Discovery Year

1944

Isolated Sample By

Glenn T. Seaborg

Production & Use

Sources

It is obtained by bombarding plutonium with helium ions. It is radioactive enough to glow in the dark.

Uses

It has no significant commercial use.

Radioactivity

Half Life

1.56×10^7 years

Lifetime

2.25×10^7 years

Decay Mode

Alpha Six

Neutron Cross Section

60

Electron Affinity

Electron Affinity (kJ/mol)

27.17

Electron Affinity (pauling)

1.28

Electron Affinity (ghosh)

0.17439

Dipole Polarity

Accepted

144

Uncertainty

25

Lattice

Angles

π/2, π/2, 2 π/3

Electron & Quantum

Oxidation States

3,4,5,6

Electron Configuration

1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2 4d10 5p6 6s2 4f14 5d10 6p6 7s2 5f7 6d1

Quantum Number

sincerity

Electron Configuration Semantic

[Rn] 5f7 6d1 7s2

Shells-0

2

Shells-1

8

Shells-2

18

Shells-3

32

Shells-4

25

Shells-5

9

Shells-6

2

Ionization Energies-0

581

List of Compounds

1-1 of 1 compound

FormulaNames
Cmcurium

curium metal


logo
Report a bugHow to contributeOpen source project
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

2024 © Gervin Fung