August 2012

Unranium and DNA 1

           The adverse effects of ionizing radiation on human health have been extensively studied. I have included information about what damage radiation can do in human bodies in other posts. Recent research indicates that there may be more biological damage caused by uranium than previous thought.

Hanford 4 - New Problem 2

          In a recent post, Hanford 3 – New Problems,  I talked about a lump of radioactive waste that had been found between the inner and outer shells of tank AY-102. There have been many DOE funded studies of the contents of that tank. Here are some of the findings. 

New tank leak at Hanford?

         The Hanford nuclear facility contains fifty three million gallons of high-level radioactive and chemical waste. These wastes were generated when corrosive chemicals were used to dissolve spent fuel rods to retrieve plutonium. Steel tanks in concrete pits are used to hold the waste.

Nickel

       Nickel is a chemical element with symbol Ni and atomic number of 28. It is a slivery-white transition metal. Nickel was used as early as 3500 BC as part of a nickel-iron alloy found in meteorites. Nickel was first purified and identified by Axel Fredrik Crosntedt in 1751. It was named for Nickel, a mischievous creature in German Miner mythology.

Krypton

          Krypton is a chemical element with symbol Kr and atomic number 36. Krypton is a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas. It was discovered by the Scottish chemist Sir William Ramsey in 1898. He discovered a series of noble gases by examining the residue left over from evaporating liquefied air.

Promethium

           Promethium is a chemical element with the symbol Pm and atomic number 61. A gap in the periodic table was pointed out between neodymium at 60 and samarium at 62 by Bohuslav Brauner. After two false claims of discovery in 1926, in 1938 a few atoms of promethium were created but intentional production and chemical proof did not happen until 1945 at Ohio State University when promethium was extracted from irradiated uranium fuel. A sample of the metal was only produced in 1963.

Californium

          Californium is a chemical element with the symbol Cf and atomic number 98. It is a silvery white actinide metal element that was first synthesized by bombardment of curium with alpha particles by a team at the University of California, Berkeley in 1950 and named for the state of California.

Technetium

          Technetium is a chemical element with the symbol Tc and atomic number 43. It is a silvery gray, crystalline transition metal in the same column of the periodic table as manganese, rhenium and bohrium. Early forms of Mendeleyev’s periodic table showed a gap above manganese and Mendeleyev predicted many of its properties from its position in the table in 1871.

Carbon

 Carbon is a chemical element with the symbol C and the atomic number 6. It has been known since ancient times. Graphite was named in 1594 by D.L.G. Harsten and A.G. Werner. Carbon was named by A.L. Lavoisier in 1789. It is a member of the non-metallic tetravalent (having 4 valence electrons) Group 14 in the periodic table which also includes silicon, germanium, tin, lead and flervium.

Strontium

          Strontium is a chemical element with symbol Sr and atomic number 38. It was discovered in 1790 by Adair Crawford, a physician, in ore taken from lead mines in the village of Strontian, Scotland and named after the village.

Cesium

          Cesium is chemical element with the symbol Cs and an atomic weight of 55. It was discovered in 1860 by Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff with the new flame spectroscopy method. It is a soft, silvery gold alkali metal with a melting point of 28° C or 82° F and is one of only five elemental metals that is liquid near room temperature. It is highly reactive and pyrophoric. In open air, it will burst into flames and it reacts explosively with water.

Iodine

          Iodine is a chemical element with the symbol I and atomic number 53. It was discovered in 1811 by Frenchman Bernard Courtis in one of those luck accidents when he added too much sulfuric acid to ashes of seaweed that he was processing. The purple vapor that was given off crystallized out on nearby surfaces and was eventually given the name “iodine” derived from the Greek word for purple.

Americium

          Americium is alkaline metal element with the symbol Am and atomic number 95. It is above uranium in the periodic table and is referred to as a transuranic element. Silvery in color, Americium is a soft radioactive metal. It was first synthesized in 1944 by Glenn T. Seaborg at the University of California, Berkeley. The name was taken from America.

Cobalt

          Cobalt is a chemical element with the symbol Co and the atomic number 27. It readily forms compounds with other elements and compounds. When it is extracted from naturally occurring compounds via reductive smelting, it is a hard, shiny, sliver-gray metal.

Plutonium 1

          Plutonium is a silvery-grey radioactive actinide metal with the symbol Pu and the atomic number of 94. Plutonium was first synthesized in 1940 by Glenn Seaborg an Edwin McMillan at the University of California by bombarding U-238 with deuterons which are nuclei of deuterium containing a neutron and a proton. Following its synthesis, plutonium-244 was discovered in minute quantities in the natural environment.

Plutonium 1

          Plutonium is a silvery-grey radioactive actinide metal with the symbol Pu and the atomic number of 94. Plutonium was first synthesized in 1940 by Glenn Seaborg an Edwin McMillan at the University of California by bombarding U-238 with deuterons which are nuclei of deuterium containing a neutron and a proton. Following its synthesis, plutonium-244 was discovered in minute quantities in the natural environment.

Radium

           Radium is a chemical element with the symbol Ra and an atomic number of 88. It was discovered in 1898 by Marie and Pierre Curie. They extracted it from uranium ore. Twelve years later, Marie Curie and Andre Debierne isolated the pure metallic form of radium by electrolysis from radium chloride. It was given the French name radium from Latin radius or ray. The curie unit of radioactivity was named for Marie Curie and is based on the radioactivity of Ra-226.

Radon

          Radon is a tasteless, colorless, odorless elemental noble gas in the family with helium, neon, argon, krypton and xenon. Its chemical symbol is Rn and it has an atomic number of 86. It is the densest noble gas and one of the densest gases that exist. As with the other noble gases, radon is chemically inert and rarely forms compounds with other substances. It was discovered in 1900 by Friedrich Ernst Dorn as a gas given off by radium.

Uranium 11 - Reprocessing

          When enriched uranium is used in nuclear reactors, the exhausted fuel consists mainly of U-238 with small amounts of U-235, plutonium and minor actinides such as neptunium, americium, curium, berkelium, californium, einsteinium, and fermium. There are commercial facilities in France, the United Kingdom and Japan for reprocessing spent fuel. Reprocessing is also carried out at nuclear weapons facilities. Reprocessing is currently carried out in eleven countries.

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