Einsteinium is a
metallic synthetic element. On the
periodic table, it is represented by the symbol
Es and
atomic number 99. It is the seventh
transuranic element, and seventh in the series of
Actinides. It was named in honor of
Albert Einstein.
Properties
Its position on the periodic table indicates that its chemical and physical properties are similar to other
metals. Though only small amounts have ever been made, it has been determined to be silver-colored. According to tracer studies conducted at Los Alamos National Laboratory using the
isotope 253Es, this element has
chemical properties typical of a heavy
trivalent, actinide element.
Like all synthetic elements, isotopes of einsteinium are radioactive.
Production
Einsteinium does not occur naturally in any measurable quantities. The modern process of creating the element starts with the irradiation of
plutonium-239 in a nuclear reactor for several years. The resulting
plutonium-242 isotope (in the form of the compound
plutonium(IV) oxide) is mixed with aluminium and formed into pellets. The pellets are then further irradiated for approximately one year in a nuclear reactor. Another four months of irradiation is required in a different reactor. The result is a mixture of
californium and einsteinium, which can then be separated.
Uses
Aside from being the byproduct of creating other elements, or a step in the production of other elements, einsteinium has no known uses.
History
Einsteinium was
first identified in December
1952 by
Albert Ghiorso and co-workers at the
University of California, Berkeley. He was examining debris from the first
hydrogen bomb test of November
1952 (see
Operation Ivy). He discovered the
isotope 253Es (
half-life 20.5 days) that was made by the
neutron capture of 15
neutrons with
238U (which then went through seven
beta decays). These findings were kept secret until
1955 due to
Cold War tensions.
Isotopes of einsteinium were produced shortly afterward at the University of California Radiation Laboratory in a nuclear fusion reaction between 14N and 238U and later by intense neutron irradiation of plutonium in the Materials Testing Reactor.
In 1961, enough einsteinium was synthesized to prepare a microscopic amount of 253Es. This sample weighed about 0.01 mg and was measured using a special balance. The material produced was used to produce mendelevium. Further einsteinium has been produced at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory's High Flux Isotope Reactor in Tennessee by bombarding 239Pu with neutrons. Around 3 milligrams were created over a four year program of irradiation and then chemical separation from a starting 1 kg of plutonium isotope.
Isotopes
Nineteen
radioisotopes of einsteinium have been characterized, with the most stable being
252Es with a
half-life of 471.7 days,
254Es with a half-life of 275.7 days,
255Es with a half-life of 39.8 days, and
253Es with a half-life of 20.47 days. All of the remaining radioactive isotopes have half-lives that are less than 40 hours, and the majority of these have half-lives that are less than 30 minutes. This element also has three
meta states, with the most stable being
254mEs (t
½ 39.3 hours). The isotopes of einsteinium range in
atomic mass from 240.069
u (
240Es) to 258.100 u (
258Es). The longest-lived isotope is
252Es.
Known compounds
The following is a list of all known compounds of einsteinium:
- EsBr2 einsteinium(II) bromide
- EsBr3 einsteinium(III) bromide
- EsCl2 einsteinium(II) chloride
- EsCl3 einsteinium(III) chloride
- EsF3 einsteinium(III) fluoride
- EsI2 einsteinium(II) iodide
- EsI3 einsteinium(III) iodide
- Es2O3 einsteinium(III) oxide
References
- Guide to the Elements - Revised Edition, Albert Stwertka, (Oxford University Press; 1998) ISBN 0-19-508083-1
External links