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    • In honor of the city of Berkeley

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      • Berkelium was produced in an atom smasher such as this one at the University of California at Berkeley. The new element was given the name berkelium by the UCB research team, in honor of the city of Berkeley, where the research was done.
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BerkeliumBerkelium - Wikipedia

    It is named after the city of Berkeley, California, the location of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (then the University of California Radiation Laboratory) where it was discovered in December 1949. Berkelium was the fifth transuranium element discovered after neptunium, plutonium, curium and americium .

    • Berkelium Discovery
    • Berkelium Properties
    • Berkelium Name Origin
    • Appearance
    • Melting Point
    • Isotopes
    • Berkelium Compounds
    • Berkelium Uses
    • Berkelium Toxicity
    • Berkelium Fast Facts

    Glenn T. Seaborg, Stanley G. Thompson, Kenneth Street, Jr., and Albert Ghiorso produced berkelium in December 1949 at the University of California, Berkeley (United States). The scientists bombarded americium-241 with alpha particles in a cyclotron to yield berkelium-243 and two free neutrons.

    Such a small quantity of this element has been produced that very little is known about its properties. Most of the available information is based on predicted properties, based on the element's location on the periodic table. It is a paramagnetic metal and has one of the lowest bulk modulus values of the actinides. Bk3+ions are fluorescent at 652 ...

    Berkelium is pronounced as BURK-lee-em. The element is named after Berkeley, California, where it was discovered. The element californiumis also named for this lab.

    Berkelium has a traditional shiny, metallic appearance. It is a soft, radioactive solid at room temperature.

    The melting point of berkelium metal is 986 °C. This value is below that of neighbor element curium (1340 °C), but higher than that of californium (900 °C).

    All of the isotopes of berkelium are radioactive. Berkelium-243 was the first isotope to be produced. The most stable isotope is berkelium-247, which has a half-life of 1380 years, eventually decaying into americium-243 via alpha decay. About 20 isotopes of berkelium are known.

    Berkelium chloride (BkCl3) was the first Bk compound produced in sufficient quantity to be visible. The compound was synthesized in 1962 and weighed approximately 3 billionths of a gram. Other compounds which have been produced and studied using x-ray diffraction include berkelium oxychloride, berkelium fluoride (BkF3), berkelium dioxide (BkO2), an...

    Since so little berkelium has ever been produced, there are no known uses of the element at this time aside from scientific research. Most of this research goes toward the synthesis of heavier elements. A 22-milligram sample of berkelium was synthesized at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and was used to make element 117 for the first time, by bombard...

    The toxicity of berkelium has not been well-studied, but it's safe to assume it presents a health hazard if ingested or inhaled, due to its radioactivity. Berkelium-249 emits low-energy electrons and is reasonably safe to handle. It decays in alpha-emitting californium-249, which remains relatively safe for handling, but does result in free-radical...

    Element Name: Berkelium
    Element Symbol: Bk
    Atomic Number: 97
    Appearance: Silvery metal
  3. Elements and Periodic Table History. Berkelium was first produced in December 1949, at the University of California at Berkeley, and was made by Stanley Thompson, Albert Ghiorso, and Glenn Seaborg.

  4. Oct 7, 2013 · Word Origin: Berkelium was named for the city of its origin, Berkeley, California. Discovery: Berkelium was first produced at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1949 by Stanley G....

  5. Not occurring in nature, berkelium (as the isotope berkelium-243) was discovered in December 1949 by American chemists Stanley G. Thompson, Albert Ghiorso, and Glenn T. Seaborg at the University of California, Berkeley, as a product resulting from the helium-ion (alpha-particle) bombardment of americium-241 (atomic number 95) in a 152-cm (60 ...

  6. Sep 11, 2019 · Born at the University and named for the city, it’s typically described as a radioactive, silvery metal with no practical application. The isotope Abergel works with is berkelium 249, which has a half-life of nearly a year.

  7. Berkelium was produced in an atom smasher such as this one at the University of California at Berkeley. The new element was given the name berkelium by the UCB research team, in honor of the city of Berkeley, where the research was done.

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