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Darmstadtium

meitneriumdarmstadtiumroentgenium
Pt
Ds
   
 
 

Known properties
Name, Symbol, NumberDarmstadtium, Ds, 110
Chemical series Transition metals
Group, Period, Block10, 7, d
Appearance unknown
Atomic weight [281] amu
Electron configuration probably [Rn] 5f14 6d9 7s1
a guess based upon platinum
e- 's per energy level2, 8, 18, 32, 32, 16, 2
State of matter Presumably a solid

Darmstadtium (formerly ununnilium or Eka-Platinum) is a chemical element in the periodic table that has the symbol Ds and atomic number 110, making it one of the super-heavy atoms. It is a synthetic element and quickly decays; its isotopes of mass 267 to 273 have half-lives measured in microseconds. However, heavier isotopes of mass 280 and 281 have been synthesized recently which are more stable, with half-lives of 7.6 s and 1.1 min, respectively. Due to its presence in Group 10 it is believed to likely be a shiny solid metal.

History

It was first created on November 9, 1994 at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI) in Darmstadt, Germany. It has never been seen and only a few atoms of it have been created by the nuclear fusion of isotopes of lead and nickel in a heavy ion accelerator (nickel atoms are the ones accelerated and bombarded into the lead).

Scientists are not always serious, so some suggested the name policium for the new element, because 110 is the emergency telephone number of the German police (similar to 911 in the USA etc). The element was named after the place of its discovery, Darmstadt (actually, the GSI is located in Wixhausen, a small suburb north of Darmstadt). The new name was given to it by the IUPAC in August 2003.

External links

07-10-2008 09:35:13
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