Americium | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Pronunciation | /ˌæmɪˈrɪsiəm/ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appearance | silvery white | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mass number | 243 (most stable isotope) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Americium in the periodic table | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Atomic number (Z) | 95 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Group | group n/a | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Period | period 7 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Block | f-block | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Element category | actinide | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Electron configuration | [Rn] 5f7 7s2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Electrons per shell
| 2, 8, 18, 32, 25, 8, 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Physical properties | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Phase at STP | solid | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Melting point | 1449 K (1176 °C, 2149 °F) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Boiling point | 2880 K (2607 °C, 4725 °F) (calculated) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Density (near r.t.) | 12 g/cm3 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Heat of fusion | 14.39 kJ/mol | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Molar heat capacity | 62.7 J/(mol·K) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Vapor pressure
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Atomic properties | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Oxidation states | +2, +3, +4, +5, +6, +7 (an amphoteric oxide) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Electronegativity | Pauling scale: 1.3 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ionization energies |
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Atomic radius | empirical: 173 pm | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Covalent radius | 180±6 pm | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Spectral lines of americium | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other properties | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Natural occurrence | synthetic | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Crystal structure | double hexagonal close-packed (dhcp) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thermal conductivity | 10 W/(m·K) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Electrical resistivity | 0.69 µΩ·m | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Magnetic ordering | paramagnetic | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Magnetic susceptibility | +1000.0·10−6 cm3/mol | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CAS Number | 7440-35-9 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
History | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Naming | after the Americas | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Discovery | Glenn T. Seaborg, Ralph A. James, Leon O. Morgan, Albert Ghiorso (1944) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Main isotopes of americium | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Americium is a synthetic chemical element with symbol Am and atomic number 95. It is radioactive and a transuranic member of the actinide series, in the periodic table located under the lanthanide element europium, and thus by analogy was named after the Americas.
Americium was first produced in 1944 by the group of Glenn T. Seaborg from Berkeley, California, at the Metallurgical Laboratory of the University of Chicago, a part of the Manhattan Project. Although it is the third element in the transuranic series, it was discovered fourth, after the heavier curium. The discovery was kept secret and only released to the public in November 1945. Most americium is produced by uranium or plutonium being bombarded with neutrons in nuclear reactors – one tonne of spent nuclear fuel contains about 100 grams of americium. It is widely used in commercial ionization chamber smoke detectors, as well as in neutron sources and industrial gauges. Several unusual applications, such as nuclear batteries or fuel for space ships with nuclear propulsion, have been proposed for the isotope 242mAm, but they are as yet hindered by the scarcity and high price of this nuclear isomer.
Americium is a relatively soft radioactive metal with silvery appearance. Its common isotopes are 241Am and 243Am. In chemical compounds, americium usually assumes the oxidation state +3, especially in solutions. Several other oxidation states are known, which range from +2 to +7 and can be identified by their characteristic optical absorption spectra. The crystal lattice of solid americium and its compounds contain small intrinsic radiogenic defects, due to metamictization induced by self-irradiation with alpha particles, which accumulates with time; this can cause a drift of some material properties over time, more noticeable in older samples.
History
Although americium was likely produced in previous nuclear experiments, it was first intentionally synthesized, isolated and identified in late autumn 1944, at the University of California, Berkeley, by Glenn T. Seaborg, Leon O. Morgan, Ralph A. James, and Albert Ghiorso. They used a 60-inch cyclotron at the University of California, Berkeley. The element was chemically identified at the Metallurgical Laboratory (now Argonne National Laboratory) of the University of Chicago. Following the lighter neptunium, plutonium, and heavier curium, americium was the fourth transuranium element to be discovered. At the time, the periodic table had been restructured by Seaborg to its present layout, containing the actinide row below the lanthanide
one. This led to americium being located right below its twin
lanthanide element europium; it was thus by analogy named after the Americas:
"The name americium (after the Americas) and the symbol Am are
suggested for the element on the basis of its position as the sixth
member of the actinide rare-earth series, analogous to europium, Eu, of
the lanthanide series."
The new element was isolated from its oxides in a complex, multi-step process. First plutonium-239 nitrate (239PuNO3) solution was coated on a platinum foil of about 0.5 cm2 area, the solution was evaporated and the residue was converted into plutonium dioxide (PuO2) by calcining. After cyclotron irradiation, the coating was dissolved with nitric acid, and then precipitated as the hydroxide using concentrated aqueous ammonia solution. The residue was dissolved in perchloric acid. Further separation was carried out by ion exchange,
yielding a certain isotope of curium. The separation of curium and
americium was so painstaking that those elements were initially called
by the Berkeley group as pandemonium (from Greek for all demons or hell) and delirium (from Latin for madness).
Initial experiments yielded four americium isotopes: 241Am, 242Am, 239Am and 238Am. Americium-241 was directly obtained from plutonium upon absorption of two neutrons. It decays by emission of a α-particle to 237Np; the half-life of this decay was first determined as 510±20 years but then corrected to 432.2 years.
- The times are half-lives
The second isotope 242Am was produced upon neutron bombardment of the already-created 241Am. Upon rapid β-decay, 242Am converts into the isotope of curium 242Cm
(which had been discovered previously). The half-life of this decay was
initially determined at 17 hours, which was close to the presently
accepted value of 16.02 h.
The discovery of americium and curium in 1944 was closely related to the Manhattan Project;
the results were confidential and declassified only in 1945. Seaborg
leaked the synthesis of the elements 95 and 96 on the U.S. radio show
for children Quiz Kids five days before the official presentation at an American Chemical Society
meeting on 11 November 1945, when one of the listeners asked whether
any new transuranium element beside plutonium and neptunium had been
discovered during the war. After the discovery of americium isotopes 241Am and 242Am, their production and compounds were patented listing only Seaborg as the inventor.
The initial americium samples weighed a few micrograms; they were
barely visible and were identified by their radioactivity. The first
substantial amounts of metallic americium weighing 40–200 micrograms
were not prepared until 1951 by reduction of americium(III) fluoride with barium metal in high vacuum at 1100 °C.
Occurrence
The longest-lived and most common isotopes of americium, 241Am and 243Am, have half-lives of 432.2 and 7,370 years, respectively. Therefore, any primordial americium (americium that was present on Earth during its formation) should have decayed by now.
Existing americium is concentrated in the areas used for the atmospheric nuclear weapons tests conducted between 1945 and 1980, as well as at the sites of nuclear incidents, such as the Chernobyl disaster. For example, the analysis of the debris at the testing site of the first U.S. hydrogen bomb, Ivy Mike, (1 November 1952, Enewetak Atoll),
revealed high concentrations of various actinides including americium;
but due to military secrecy, this result was not published until later,
in 1956. Trinitite, the glassy residue left on the desert floor near Alamogordo, New Mexico, after the plutonium-based Trinity nuclear bomb test on 16 July 1945, contains traces of americium-241. Elevated levels of americium were also detected at the crash site of a US Boeing B-52 bomber aircraft, which carried four hydrogen bombs, in 1968 in Greenland.
In other regions, the average radioactivity of surface soil due to residual americium is only about 0.01 picocuries/g (0.37 mBq/g).
Atmospheric americium compounds are poorly soluble in common solvents
and mostly adhere to soil particles. Soil analysis revealed about 1,900
times higher concentration of americium inside sandy soil particles than
in the water present in the soil pores; an even higher ratio was
measured in loam soils.
Americium is produced mostly artificially in small quantities,
for research purposes. A tonne of spent nuclear fuel contains about
100 grams of various americium isotopes, mostly 241Am and 243Am.
Their prolonged radioactivity is undesirable for the disposal, and
therefore americium, together with other long-lived actinides, must be
neutralized. The associated procedure may involve several steps, where
americium is first separated and then converted by neutron bombardment
in special reactors to short-lived nuclides. This procedure is well
known as nuclear transmutation, but it is still being developed for americium. The transuranic elements from americium to fermium occurred naturally in the natural nuclear fission reactor at Oklo, but no longer do so.
Synthesis and extraction
Isotope nucleosyntheses
Americium has been produced in small quantities in nuclear reactors for decades, and kilograms of its 241Am and 243Am isotopes have been accumulated by now. Nevertheless, since it was first offered for sale in 1962, its price, about 1,500 USD per gram of 241Am, remains almost unchanged owing to the very complex separation procedure. The heavier isotope 243Am
is produced in much smaller amounts; it is thus more difficult to
separate, resulting in a higher cost of the order 100,000–160,000 USD/g.
Americium is not synthesized directly from uranium – the most common reactor material – but from the plutonium isotope 239Pu. The latter needs to be produced first, according to the following nuclear process:
The capture of two neutrons by 239Pu (a so-called (n,γ) reaction), followed by a β-decay, results in 241Am:
The plutonium present in spent nuclear fuel contains about 12% of 241Pu. Because it spontaneously converts to 241Am, 241Pu can be extracted and may be used to generate further 241Am. However, this process is rather slow: half of the original amount of 241Pu decays to 241Am after about 15 years, and the 241Am amount reaches a maximum after 70 years.
The obtained 241Am can be used for generating heavier americium isotopes by further neutron capture inside a nuclear reactor. In a light water reactor (LWR), 79% of 241Am converts to 242Am and 10% to its nuclear isomer 242mAm:
Americium-242 has a half-life of only 16 hours, which makes its further conversion to 243Am extremely inefficient. The latter isotope is produced instead in a process where 239Pu captures four neutrons under high neutron flux:
Metal generation
Most
synthesis routines yield a mixture of different actinide isotopes in
oxide forms, from which isotopes of americium can be separated. In a
typical procedure, the spent reactor fuel (e.g. MOX fuel) is dissolved in nitric acid, and the bulk of uranium and plutonium is removed using a PUREX-type extraction (Plutonium–URanium EXtraction) with tributyl phosphate in a hydrocarbon. The lanthanides and remaining actinides are then separated from the aqueous residue (raffinate) by a diamide-based
extraction, to give, after stripping, a mixture of trivalent actinides
and lanthanides. Americium compounds are then selectively extracted
using multi-step chromatographic and centrifugation techniques with an appropriate reagent. A large amount of work has been done on the solvent extraction of americium. For example, a 2003 EU-funded project codenamed "EUROPART" studied triazines and other compounds as potential extraction agents. A bis-triazinyl bipyridine complex was proposed in 2009 as such a reagent is highly selective to americium (and curium). Separation of americium from the highly similar curium can be achieved by treating a slurry of their hydroxides in aqueous sodium bicarbonate with ozone,
at elevated temperatures. Both Am and Cm are mostly present in
solutions in the +3 valence state; whereas curium remains unchanged,
americium oxidizes to soluble Am(IV) complexes which can be washed away.
Metallic americium is obtained by reduction from its compounds. Americium(III) fluoride was first used for this purpose. The reaction was conducted using elemental barium as reducing agent in a water- and oxygen-free environment inside an apparatus made of tantalum and tungsten.
Physical properties
In the periodic table, americium is located to the right of plutonium, to the left of curium, and below the lanthanide europium,
with which it shares many similarities in physical and chemical
properties. Americium is a highly radioactive element. When freshly
prepared, it has a silvery-white metallic lustre, but then slowly
tarnishes in air. With a density of 12 g/cm3, americium is less dense than both curium (13.52 g/cm3) and plutonium (19.8 g/cm3); but has a higher density than europium (5.264 g/cm3)—mostly because of its higher atomic mass. Americium is relatively soft and easily deformable and has a significantly lower bulk modulus than the actinides before it: Th, Pa, U, Np and Pu.
Its melting point of 1173 °C is significantly higher than that of
plutonium (639 °C) and europium (826 °C), but lower than for curium
(1340 °C).
At ambient conditions, americium is present in its most stable α form which has a hexagonal crystal symmetry, and a space group P63/mmc with cell parameters a = 346.8 pm and c = 1124 pm, and four atoms per unit cell. The crystal consists of a double-hexagonal close packing with the layer sequence ABAC and so is isotypic with α-lanthanum and several actinides such as α-curium.
The crystal structure of americium changes with pressure and
temperature. When compressed at room temperature to 5 GPa, α-Am
transforms to the β modification, which has a face-centered cubic (fcc) symmetry, space group Fm3m and lattice constant a = 489 pm. This fcc structure is equivalent to the closest packing with the sequence ABC. Upon further compression to 23 GPa, americium transforms to an orthorhombic
γ-Am structure similar to that of α-uranium. There are no further
transitions observed up to 52 GPa, except for an appearance of a
monoclinic phase at pressures between 10 and 15 GPa.
There is no consistency on the status of this phase in the literature,
which also sometimes lists the α, β and γ phases as I, II and III. The
β-γ transition is accompanied by a 6% decrease in the crystal volume;
although theory also predicts a significant volume change for the α-β
transition, it is not observed experimentally. The pressure of the α-β
transition decreases with increasing temperature, and when α-americium
is heated at ambient pressure, at 770 °C it changes into an fcc phase which is different from β-Am, and at 1075 °C it converts to a body-centered cubic structure. The pressure-temperature phase diagram of americium is thus rather similar to those of lanthanum, praseodymium and neodymium.
As with many other actinides, self-damage of the crystal
structure due to alpha-particle irradiation is intrinsic to americium.
It is especially noticeable at low temperatures, where the mobility of
the produced structure defects is relatively low, by broadening of X-ray diffraction peaks. This effect makes somewhat uncertain the temperature of americium and some of its properties, such as electrical resistivity.
So for americium-241, the resistivity at 4.2 K increases with time from
about 2 µOhm·cm to 10 µOhm·cm after 40 hours, and saturates at about
16 µOhm·cm after 140 hours. This effect is less pronounced at room
temperature, due to annihilation of radiation defects; also heating to
room temperature the sample which was kept for hours at low temperatures
restores its resistivity. In fresh samples, the resistivity gradually
increases with temperature from about 2 µOhm·cm at liquid helium to 69 µOhm·cm at room temperature; this behavior is similar to that of neptunium, uranium, thorium and protactinium,
but is different from plutonium and curium which show a rapid rise up
to 60 K followed by saturation. The room temperature value for americium
is lower than that of neptunium, plutonium and curium, but higher than
for uranium, thorium and protactinium.
Americium is paramagnetic in a wide temperature range, from that of liquid helium,
to room temperature and above. This behavior is markedly different from
that of its neighbor curium which exhibits antiferromagnetic transition
at 52 K. The thermal expansion coefficient of americium is slightly anisotropic and amounts to (7.5±0.2)×10−6 /°C along the shorter a axis and (6.2±0.4)×10−6 /°C for the longer c hexagonal axis. The enthalpy of dissolution of americium metal in hydrochloric acid at standard conditions is −620.6±1.3 kJ/mol, from which the standard enthalpy change of formation (ΔfH°) of aqueous Am3+ ion is −621.2±2.0 kJ/mol. The standard potential Am3+/Am0 is −2.08±0.01 V.
Chemical properties
Americium readily reacts with oxygen and dissolves well in acids. The most common oxidation state for americium is +3,
in which americium compounds are rather stable against oxidation and
reduction. In this sense, americium is chemically similar to most
lanthanides. The trivalent americium forms insoluble fluoride, oxalate, iodate, hydroxide, phosphate and other salts.
Other oxidation states have been observed between +2 and +7, which is
the widest range among the actinide elements. Their color in aqueous
solutions varies as follows: Am3+ (colorless to yellow-reddish), Am4+ (yellow-reddish), AmVO+
2; (yellow), AmVIO2+
2 (brown) and AmVIIO5−
6 (dark green). All oxidation states have their characteristic optical absorption spectra, with a few sharp peaks in the visible and mid-infrared regions, and the position and intensity of these peaks can be converted into the concentrations of the corresponding oxidation states. For example, Am(III) has two sharp peaks at 504 and 811 nm, Am(V) at 514 and 715 nm, and Am(VI) at 666 and 992 nm.
2; (yellow), AmVIO2+
2 (brown) and AmVIIO5−
6 (dark green). All oxidation states have their characteristic optical absorption spectra, with a few sharp peaks in the visible and mid-infrared regions, and the position and intensity of these peaks can be converted into the concentrations of the corresponding oxidation states. For example, Am(III) has two sharp peaks at 504 and 811 nm, Am(V) at 514 and 715 nm, and Am(VI) at 666 and 992 nm.
Americium compounds with oxidation state +4 and higher are strong oxidizing agents, comparable in strength to the permanganate ion (MnO−
4) in acidic solutions. Whereas the Am4+ ions are unstable in solutions and readily convert to Am3+, the +4 oxidation state occurs well in solids, such as americium dioxide (AmO2) and americium(IV) fluoride (AmF4).
4) in acidic solutions. Whereas the Am4+ ions are unstable in solutions and readily convert to Am3+, the +4 oxidation state occurs well in solids, such as americium dioxide (AmO2) and americium(IV) fluoride (AmF4).
All pentavalent and hexavalent americium compounds are complex salts such as KAmO2F2, Li3AmO4 and Li6AmO6, Ba3AmO6, AmO2F2. These high oxidation states Am(IV), Am(V) and Am(VI) can be prepared from Am(III) by oxidation with ammonium persulfate in dilute nitric acid, with silver(I) oxide in perchloric acid, or with ozone or sodium persulfate in sodium carbonate solutions. The pentavalent oxidation state of americium was first observed in 1951. It is present in aqueous solution in the form of AmO+
2 ions (acidic) or AmO−
3 ions (alkaline) which are however unstable and subject to several rapid disproportionation reactions:
2 ions (acidic) or AmO−
3 ions (alkaline) which are however unstable and subject to several rapid disproportionation reactions:
Chemical compounds
Oxygen compounds
Three americium oxides are known, with the oxidation states +2 (AmO), +3 (Am2O3) and +4 (AmO2). Americium(II) oxide was prepared in minute amounts and has not been characterized in details. Americium(III) oxide is a red-brown solid with a melting point of 2205 °C. Americium(IV) oxide
is the main form of solid americium which is used in nearly all its
applications. As most other actinide dioxides, it is a black solid with a
cubic (fluorite) crystal structure.
The oxalate of americium(III), vacuum dried at room temperature, has the chemical formula Am2(C2O4)3·7H2O. Upon heating in vacuum, it loses water at 240 °C and starts decomposing into AmO2 at 300 °C, the decomposition completes at about 470 °C. The initial oxalate dissolves in nitric acid with the maximum solubility of 0.25 g/L.
Halides
Halides of americium are known for the oxidation states +2, +3 and +4,[63] where the +3 is most stable, especially in solutions.
Oxidation state | F | Cl | Br | I |
---|---|---|---|---|
+4 | Americium(IV) fluoride AmF4 pale pink |
|
|
|
+3 | Americium(III) fluoride AmF3 pink |
Americium(III) chloride AmCl3 pink |
Americium(III) bromide AmBr3 light yellow |
Americium(III) iodide AmI3 light yellow |
+2 |
|
Americium(II) chloride AmCl2 black |
Americium(II) bromide AmBr2 black |
Americium(II) iodide AmI2 black |
Reduction of Am(III) compounds with sodium amalgam yields Am(II) salts – the black halides AmCl2, AmBr2 and AmI2.
They are very sensitive to oxygen and oxidize in water, releasing
hydrogen and converting back to the Am(III) state. Specific lattice
constants are:
- Orthorhombic AmCl2: a = 896.3±0.8 pm, b = 757.3±0.8 pm and c = 453.2±0.6 pm
- Tetragonal AmBr2: a = 1159.2±0.4 pm and c = 712.1±0.3 pm. They can also be prepared by reacting metallic americium with an appropriate mercury halide HgX2, where X = Cl, Br or I:
Americium(III) fluoride (AmF3) is poorly soluble and precipitates upon reaction of Am3+ and fluoride ions in weak acidic solutions:
The tetravalent americium(IV) fluoride (AmF4) is obtained by reacting solid americium(III) fluoride with molecular fluorine:
Another known form of solid tetravalent americium chloride is KAmF5. Tetravalent americium has also been observed in the aqueous phase. For this purpose, black Am(OH)4 was dissolved in 15-M NH4F
with the americium concentration of 0.01 M. The resulting reddish
solution had a characteristic optical absorption spectrum which is
similar to that of AmF4 but differed from other oxidation
states of americium. Heating the Am(IV) solution to 90 °C did not result
in its disproportionation or reduction, however a slow reduction was
observed to Am(III) and assigned to self-irradiation of americium by
alpha particles.
Most americium(III) halides form hexagonal crystals with slight
variation of the color and exact structure between the halogens. So,
chloride (AmCl3) is reddish and has a structure isotypic to uranium(III) chloride (space group P63/m) and the melting point of 715 °C. The fluoride is isotypic to LaF3 (space group P63/mmc) and the iodide to BiI3 (space group R3). The bromide is an exception with the orthorhombic PuBr3-type structure and space group Cmcm. Crystals of americium hexahydrate (AmCl3·6H2O)
can be prepared by dissolving americium dioxide in hydrochloric acid
and evaporating the liquid. Those crystals are hygroscopic and have
yellow-reddish color and a monoclinic crystal structure.
Oxyhalides of americium in the form AmVIO2X2, AmVO2X, AmIVOX2 and AmIIIOX can be obtained by reacting the corresponding americium halide with oxygen or Sb2O3, and AmOCl can also be produced by vapor phase hydrolysis:
Chalcogenides and pnictides
The known chalcogenides of americium include the sulfide AmS2, selenides AmSe2 and Am3Se4, and tellurides Am2Te3 and AmTe2. The pnictides of americium (243Am) of the AmX type are known for the elements phosphorus, arsenic, antimony and bismuth. They crystallize in the rock-salt lattice.
Silicides and borides
Americium monosilicide (AmSi) and "disilicide" (nominally AmSix with: 1.87 < x < 2.0) were obtained by reduction of americium(III) fluoride with elementary silicon in vacuum at 1050 °C (AmSi) and 1150−1200 °C (AmSix). AmSi is a black solid isomorphic with LaSi, it has an orthorhombic crystal symmetry. AmSix has a bright silvery lustre and a tetragonal crystal lattice (space group I41/amd), it is isomorphic with PuSi2 and ThSi2. Borides of americium include AmB4 and AmB6. The tetraboride can be obtained by heating an oxide or halide of americium with magnesium diboride in vacuum or inert atmosphere.
Organoamericium compounds
Analogous to uranocene, americium forms the organometallic compound amerocene with two cyclooctatetraene ligands, with the chemical formula (η8-C8H8)2Am. A cyclopentadienyl complex is also known that is likely to be stoichiometrically AmCp3.
Formation of the complexes of the type Am(n-C3H7-BTP)3, where BTP stands for 2,6-di(1,2,4-triazin-3-yl)pyridine, in solutions containing n-C3H7-BTP and Am3+ ions has been confirmed by EXAFS.
Some of these BTP-type complexes selectively interact with americium
and therefore are useful in its selective separation from lanthanides
and another actinides.
Biological aspects
Americium is an artificial element of recent origin, and thus does not have a biological requirement. It is harmful to life. It has been proposed to use bacteria for removal of americium and other heavy metals from rivers and streams. Thus, Enterobacteriaceae of the genus Citrobacter precipitate americium ions from aqueous solutions, binding them into a metal-phosphate complex at their cell walls. Several studies have been reported on the biosorption and bioaccumulation of americium by bacteria and fungi.
Fission
The isotope 242mAm (half-life 141 years) has the largest cross sections for absorption of thermal neutrons (5,700 barns), that results in a small critical mass for a sustained nuclear chain reaction. The critical mass for a bare 242mAm
sphere is about 9–14 kg (the uncertainty results from insufficient
knowledge of its material properties). It can be lowered to 3–5 kg with a
metal reflector and should become even smaller with a water reflector. Such small critical mass is favorable for portable nuclear weapons, but those based on 242mAm
are not known yet, probably because of its scarcity and high price. The
critical masses of two other readily available isotopes, 241Am and 243Am, are relatively high – 57.6 to 75.6 kg for 241Am and 209 kg for 243Am. Scarcity and high price yet hinder application of americium as a nuclear fuel in nuclear reactors.
There are proposals of very compact 10-kW high-flux reactors using as little as 20 grams of 242mAm. Such low-power reactors would be relatively safe to use as neutron sources for radiation therapy in hospitals.
Isotopes
About 19 isotopes and 8 nuclear isomers are known for americium. There are two long-lived alpha-emitters; 243Am has a half-life of 7,370 years and is the most stable isotope, and 241Am has a half-life of 432.2 years. The most stable nuclear isomer is 242m1Am; it has a long half-life of 141 years. The half-lives of other isotopes and isomers range from 0.64 microseconds for 245m1Am to 50.8 hours for 240Am.
As with most other actinides, the isotopes of americium with odd number
of neutrons have relatively high rate of nuclear fission and low
critical mass.
Americium-241 decays to 237Np
emitting alpha particles of 5 different energies, mostly at 5.486 MeV
(85.2%) and 5.443 MeV (12.8%). Because many of the resulting states are
metastable, they also emit gamma rays with the discrete energies between 26.3 and 158.5 keV.
Americium-242 is a short-lived isotope with a half-life of 16.02 h. It mostly (82.7%) converts by β-decay to 242Cm, but also by electron capture to 242Pu (17.3%). Both 242Cm and 242Pu transform via nearly the same decay chain through 238Pu down to 234U.
Nearly all (99.541%) of 242m1Am decays by internal conversion to 242Am and the remaining 0.459% by α-decay to 238Np. The latter subsequently decays to 238Pu and then to 234U.
Americium-243 transforms by α-emission into 239Np, which converts by β-decay to 239Pu, and the 239Pu changes into 235U by emitting an α-particle.
Applications
Ionization-type smoke detector
Americium is used in the most common type of household smoke detector, which uses 241Am in the form of americium dioxide as its source of ionizing radiation. This isotope is preferred over 226Ra because it emits 5 times more alpha particles and relatively little harmful gamma radiation. Element collector Theodore Gray mentions in his book The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe:
You might think that a synthetic radioactive element that follows plutonium (94)—and has a significantly shorter half-life—would be some kind of superbomb material, available only to scientists in secret laboratories. Perhaps a mad scientist is studying americium in a lair somewhere, but if you want some yourself you can simply walk into any neighborhood hardware store, supermarket, or Wal-Mart and buy some, no questions asked.
The reason is not that americium is fundamentally less dangerous than the elements around it. In fact, the commonly available isotope, 241Am, is significantly more radioactive than weapons-grade plutonium, and at least as toxic. No, the difference is simply that there is a useful application for americium that requires only a very tiny amount, and for which a company was prepared to go through the effort required to carve out and get a regulatory exception.
The amount of americium in a typical new smoke detector is 1 microcurie (37 kBq) or 0.29 microgram. This amount declines slowly as the americium decays into neptunium-237,
a different transuranic element with a much longer half-life (about
2.14 million years). With its half-life of 432.2 years, the americium in
a smoke detector includes about 3% neptunium after 19 years, and about 5% after 32 years. The radiation passes through an ionization chamber, an air-filled space between two electrodes, and permits a small, constant current
between the electrodes. Any smoke that enters the chamber absorbs the
alpha particles, which reduces the ionization and affects this current,
triggering the alarm. Compared to the alternative optical smoke
detector, the ionization smoke detector is cheaper and can detect
particles which are too small to produce significant light scattering;
however, it is more prone to false alarms.
Radionuclide
As 241Am has a roughly similar half-life to 238Pu (432.2 years vs. 87 years), it has been proposed as an active element of radioisotope thermoelectric generators, for example in spacecraft. Although americium produces less heat and electricity – the power yield is 114.7 mW/g for 241Am and 6.31 mW/g for 243Am (cf. 390 mW/g for 238Pu) – and its radiation poses more threat to humans owing to neutron emission, the European Space Agency is considering using americium for its space probes.
Another proposed space-related application of americium is a fuel
for space ships with nuclear propulsion. It relies on the very high
rate of nuclear fission of 242mAm, which can be maintained
even in a micrometer-thick foil. Small thickness avoids the problem of
self-absorption of emitted radiation. This problem is pertinent to
uranium or plutonium rods, in which only surface layers provide
alpha-particles. The fission products of 242mAm
can either directly propel the spaceship or they can heat a thrusting
gas. They can also transfer their energy to a fluid and generate
electricity through a magnetohydrodynamic generator.
One more proposal which utilizes the high nuclear fission rate of 242mAm
is a nuclear battery. Its design relies not on the energy of the
emitted by americium alpha particles, but on their charge, that is the
americium acts as the self-sustaining "cathode". A single 3.2 kg 242mAm charge of such battery could provide about 140 kW of power over a period of 80 days. Even with all the potential benefits, the current applications of 242mAm are as yet hindered by the scarcity and high price of this particular nuclear isomer.
Neutron source
The oxide of 241Am pressed with beryllium is an efficient neutron source.
Here americium acts as the alpha source, and beryllium produces
neutrons owing to its large cross-section for the (α,n) nuclear
reaction:
The most widespread use of 241AmBe neutron sources is a neutron probe
– a device used to measure the quantity of water present in soil, as
well as moisture/density for quality control in highway construction. 241Am neutron sources are also used in well logging applications, as well as in neutron radiography, tomography and other radiochemical investigations.
Production of other elements
Americium is a starting material for the production of other transuranic elements and transactinides – for example, 82.7% of 242Am decays to 242Cm and 17.3% to 242Pu. In the nuclear reactor, 242Am is also up-converted by neutron capture to 243Am and 244Am, which transforms by β-decay to 244Cm:
Irradiation of 241Am by 12C or 22Ne ions yields the isotopes 247Es (einsteinium) or 260Db (dubnium), respectively. Furthermore, the element berkelium (243Bk isotope) had been first intentionally produced and identified by bombarding 241Am with alpha particles, in 1949, by the same Berkeley group, using the same 60-inch cyclotron. Similarly, nobelium was produced at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Dubna, Russia, in 1965 in several reactions, one of which included irradiation of 243Am with 15N ions. Besides, one of the synthesis reactions for lawrencium, discovered by scientists at Berkeley and Dubna, included bombardment of 243Am with 18O.
Spectrometer
Americium-241
has been used as a portable source of both gamma rays and alpha
particles for a number of medical and industrial uses. The 59.5409 keV
gamma ray emissions from 241Am in such sources can be used for indirect analysis of materials in radiography and X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy, as well as for quality control in fixed nuclear density gauges and nuclear densometers. For example, the element has been employed to gauge glass thickness to help create flat glass.
Americium-241 is also suitable for calibration of gamma-ray
spectrometers in the low-energy range, since its spectrum consists of
nearly a single peak and negligible Compton continuum (at least three
orders of magnitude lower intensity).
Americium-241 gamma rays were also used to provide passive diagnosis of
thyroid function. This medical application is however obsolete.
Health concerns
As
a highly radioactive element, americium and its compounds must be
handled only in an appropriate laboratory under special arrangements.
Although most americium isotopes predominantly emit alpha particles
which can be blocked by thin layers of common materials, many of the
daughter products emit gamma-rays and neutrons which have a long
penetration depth.
If consumed, most of the americium is excreted within a few days,
with only 0.05% absorbed in the blood, of which roughly 45% goes to
the liver
and 45% to the bones, and the remaining 10% is excreted. The uptake to
the liver depends on the individual and increases with age. In the
bones, americium is first deposited over cortical and trabecular surfaces and slowly redistributes over the bone with time. The biological half-life of 241Am is 50 years in the bones and 20 years in the liver, whereas in the gonads
(testicles and ovaries) it remains permanently; in all these organs,
americium promotes formation of cancer cells as a result of its
radioactivity.
Americium often enters landfills from discarded smoke detectors. The rules associated with the disposal of smoke detectors are relaxed in most jurisdictions. In 1994, 17-year-old David Hahn extracted the americium from about 100 smoke detectors in an attempt to build a breeder nuclear reactor. There have been a few cases of exposure to americium, the worst case being that of chemical operations technician Harold McCluskey,
who at the age of 64 was exposed to 500 times the occupational standard
for americium-241 as a result of an explosion in his lab. McCluskey
died at the age of 75 of unrelated pre-existing disease.