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Astat (At)

engelsk: Astatine
Astat er et kemisk grundstof i det periodiske system med kemisk symbol At og atomnummer 85 med en atomvægt på 210 u og er klassificeret som halvmetal og er en del af gruppen 17 (halogener). Astat er fast ved stuetemperatur.

Astat i det periodiske system

SymbolAt
Atomnummer85
Gruppe17 (Halogener)
Periode6
Blokp
KlassifikationHalvmetal
UdseendeUnknown, probably metallic
Farve Sølv
Antal protoner85 p+
Antal neutroner125 n0
Antal elektroner85 e-
Fra Wikipedia, den gratis encyklopædiAstat (også Astatin) er et sjældent forekommende radioaktivt grundstof med kemisk symbol At og atomnummer 85 i det periodiske system. Det dannes ved radioaktivt henfald af tungere grundstoffer. Alle isotoper af astat er kortlivede; den mest stabile er astat-210, som har en halveringstid på 8,1 timer. Dets fysiske egenskaber er vanskelige at bestemme, da enhver makroskopisk prøve af astat øjeblikkeligt ville fordampe som følge af radioaktiv opvarmning. Det vides endnu ikke, om dette problem kan løses ved tilstrækkelig nedkøling.

Fysiske egenskaber

Fase ved STPFast
Massefylde6.35 g/cm3
Atommasse210 u

Thermal properties

Smeltepunkt575 K
301.85 °C
575.33 °F
Kogepunkt610 K
336.85 °C
638.33 °F
Fordampningsvarme30 kJ/mol

Atomiske egenskaber

Elektronegativitet (Pauling Scale)2.2
Elektronaffinitet233 kJ/mol
Oxidationstrin−1, +1, +3, +5, +7
()
Ioniseringsenergier
  1. 899.003 kJ/mol

Elektronkonfiguration for astat

Elektronkonfiguration
Kortfattet konfiguration
[Xe] 4f14 5d10 6s2 6p5
Elektronkonfiguration
Fuld konfiguration
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d10 4s2 4p6 4d10 4f14 5s2 5p6 5d10 6s2 6p5
Elektronkonfigurationsdiagram
1s2
2s22p6
3s23p63d10
4s24p64d104f14
5s25p65d10
6s26p5
Elektroner pr. Skal2, 8, 18, 32, 18, 7
Valenselektroner 7
Valency-elektroner 1
Bohrs atommodel
AstatElectron shell for Astat, created by Injosoft ABAt
Figur: Skaldiagram af Astat (At) atom.
Orbital diagram
1s
2s2p
3s3p3d
4s4p4d4f
5s5p5d
6s6p

The history of Astatine

OpdagetDale R. Corson, Kenneth Ross MacKenzie, Emilio Segrè (1940)
Opdagelse af astat
Later in 1940, Dale R. Corson, Kenneth Ross MacKenzie, and Emilio Segrè isolated the element at the University of California, Berkeley. Instead of searching for the element in nature, the scientists created it by bombarding bismuth-209 with alpha particles in a cyclotron (particle accelerator) to produce, after emission of two neutrons, astatine-211. The discoverers, however, did not immediately suggest a name for the element. The reason for this was that at the time, an element created synthetically in "invisible quantities" that had not yet been discovered in nature was not seen as a completely valid one; in addition, chemists were reluctant to recognize radioactive isotopes as legitimately as stable ones. In 1943, astatine was found as a product of two naturally occurring decay chains by Berta Karlik and Traude Bernert, first in the so-called uranium series, and then in the actinium series. (Since then, astatine was also found in a third decay chain, the neptunium series.) Friedrich Paneth in 1946 called to finally recognize synthetic elements, quoting, among other reasons, recent confirmation of their natural occurrence, and proposed that the discoverers of the newly discovered unnamed elements name these elements. In early 1947, Nature published the discoverers' suggestions; a letter from Corson, MacKenzie, and Segrè suggested the name "astatine" coming from the Greek astatos (αστατος) meaning "unstable", because of its propensity for radioactive decay, with the ending "-ine", found in the names of the four previously discovered halogens. The name was also chosen to continue the tradition of the four stable halogens, where the name referred to a property of the element.

Identifikatorer

List of unique identifiers for Astat in various chemical registry databases
CAS Number7440-68-8
ChemSpider ID4573995
EC number-
PubChem CID Number5460480