Scientists Propose New Names for Elements 114 and 116
On ScienceDaily
(Dec. 1, 2011) — The International Union of Pure
and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) have recommended new proposed names for elements
114 and 116, the latest heavy elements to be added to the periodic table. its mean that there a new comer or a new family in periodic tabel.
In
June 2011, finally the IUPAC officially receive the elements number 114 and 116 as the heaviest
elements, its more long-long ago, its about more than 10 years after this elements discover by scientists from the Joint Institute for
Nuclear Research in Dubna and Lawrence Livermore chemists . Scientists of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL)-Dubna
collaboration proposed the names as Flerovium for element 114 and Livermorium
for element 116.
Flerovium
(atomic symbol Fl) was chosen to honor Flerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions,
where superheavy elements, including element 114, were synthesized. Georgiy N.
Flerov (1913-1990) was a renowned physicist who discovered the spontaneous
fission of uranium and was a pioneer in heavy-ion physics. He is the founder of
the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research. In 1991, the laboratory was named
after Flerov -- Flerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions (FLNR).
Livermorium
(atomic symbol Lv) was chosen to honor Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
(LLNL) and the city of Livermore, Calif. A group of researchers from the Laboratory,
along with scientists at the Flerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions,
participated in the work carried out in Dubna on the synthesis of superheavy
elements, including element 116. (Lawrencium -- Element 103 -- was already
named for LLNL's founder E.O. Lawrence.)
In
1989, Flerov and Ken Hulet (1926-2010) of LLNL established collaboration
between scientists at LLNL and scientists at FLNR; one of the results of this
long-standing collaboration was the synthesis of elements 114 and 116.
"Proposing
these names for the elements honors not only the individual contributions of
scientists from these laboratories to the fields of nuclear science, heavy
element research, and superheavy element research, but also the phenomenal
cooperation and collaboration that has occurred between scientists at these two
locations," said Bill Goldstein, associate director of LLNL's Physical and
Life Sciences Directorate.
LLNL
scientists Ken Moody, Dawn Shaughnessy, Jackie Kenneally and Mark Stoyer were
critical members of the team along with a team of retired LLNL scientists
including John Wild, Ron Lougheed and Jerry Landrum. Former LLNL scientists
Nancy Stoyer, Carola Gregorich, Jerry Landrum, Joshua Patin and Philip Wilk
also were on the team. The research was supported by LLNL Laboratory Research
and Development funds (LDRD).
Scientists
at LLNL have been involved in heavy element research since the Laboratory's
inception in 1952 and have been collaborators in the discovery of six elements
-- 113,114,115,116,117 and 118.
Livermore
also has been at the forefront of investigations into other areas related to
nuclear science such as cross-section measurements, nuclear theory,
radiochemical diagnostics of laser-induced reactions, separations chemistry
including rapid automated aqueous separations, actinide chemistry,
heavy-element target fabrication, and nuclear forensics.
The
creation of elements 116 and 114 involved smashing calcium ions (with 20
protons each) into a curium target (96 protons) to create element 116. Element
116 decayed almost immediately into element 114. The scientists also created
element 114 separately by replacing curium with a plutonium target (94
protons).
The
creation of elements 114 and 116 generate hope that the team is on its way to
the "island of stability," an area of the periodic table in which new
heavy elements would be stable or last long enough for applications to be
found.
The
new names were submitted to the IUPAC in late October and now remain in the
public domain. The new names will not be official until about five months from
now when the public comment period is over.
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