Ununtrium
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| General | |||||||||||||
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| Name, Symbol, Number | ununtrium, Uut, 113 | ||||||||||||
| Chemical series | presumably poor metals | ||||||||||||
| Group, Period, Block | 13, 7, p | ||||||||||||
| Appearance | unknown, probably silvery white or metallic gray | ||||||||||||
| Standard atomic weight | (293) g·mol−1 | ||||||||||||
| Electron configuration | perhaps [Rn] 5f14 6d10 7s2 7p1 (guess based on thallium) | ||||||||||||
| Electrons per shell | 2, 8, 18, 32, 32, 18, 3 | ||||||||||||
| Phase | presumably a solid | ||||||||||||
| CAS registry number | 54084-70-7 | ||||||||||||
| Selected isotopes | |||||||||||||
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| References | |||||||||||||
Ununtrium (IPA: /ˌjuːˈnʌntriəm/), or eka-thallium, is the temporary name of a synthetic element in the periodic table that has the temporary symbol Uut and has the atomic number 113. It comes from the alpha decay (release of a helium nucleus) of ununpentium. Following periodic trends it is expected to be a soft, silvery highly reactive metal, rather like sodium.
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[edit] History
On February 1, 2004, the discovery of ununtrium and ununpentium were reported by a team composed of Russian scientists at Dubna (Joint Institute for Nuclear Research), and American scientists at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
On September 28, 2004, a team of Japanese scientists at RIKEN declared that they succeeded in synthesizing the element.[1][2]
In May 2006, at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, the synthesis of this element was confirmed by another method (the chemical identifying on final products of decay of element).
[edit] Name
Ununtrium is a temporary IUPAC systematic element name. Scientists from Japan proposed for the element the name japonium (symbol Jp) or rikenium (Rk) after RIKEN.[3]
