Curium is a silvery metal that is hard and brittle and tarnishes gradually in air at room temperature.
Introduction to atomic number of curium
It
is first produced by Glenn T. Seaborg, Albert Ghiorso, and Ralph A.
James at University of California in 1944. Its symbol is Cm and the
atomic number of curium is 96. Curium does not occur in nature and is a
synthetic chemical (produced artificially) produced in nuclear reactors
by bombarding plutonium with helium ions (alpha particles).
Properties of Curium
- Molecular Weight: 247.070347 [g/mol]
- IUPAC Name: curium
- Canonical SMILES: [Cm]
- InChI: InChI=1S/Cm
- InChIKey: NIWWFAAXEMMFMS-UHFFFAOYSA-N
- Atomic number of curium: 96
- Element category: actinide
- Period and block: 7, f
- Electron configuration: [Rn]7s25f76d1
- Phase: solid
- Density: 13.51 g•cm−3
- Melting point: 1613 K
- Boiling point: 3383 K
- Crystal structure: hexagonal close-packed
- Atomic Radius: 170 pm
- Oxidation States: 3
Uses of Curium
- Curium is available only in extremely small quantities. Curium can be used as source of thermoelectric power in crewless space probes and satellites without any heavy shielding.
- Curium-242 isotope is used in radio isotopic power generators as it produces around 3 watts of heat energy per gram (through radioactive decay).
- Curium-242 is used as source of alpha particles in lunar missions to bombard alpha particles to the moon’s soil to determine materials present in moon soil.
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