Misplaced Pages

Alpha nuclide

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Nuclide made up of alpha particles

An alpha nuclide is a nuclide that consists of an integer number of alpha particles. Alpha nuclides have equal, even numbers of protons and neutrons; they are important in stellar nucleosynthesis since the energetic environment within stars is amenable to fusion of alpha particles into heavier nuclei. Stable alpha nuclides, and stable decay products of radioactive alpha nuclides, are some of the most common metals in the universe.

Alpha nuclide is also shorthand for alpha radionuclide, referring to those radioactive isotopes that undergo alpha decay and thereby emit alpha particles.

List of alpha nuclides

The entries for Ar and Ca are theoretical: they would release energy on decay, but the process has never been observed, and the half-lives are probably extremely long. Likewise, the chains for masses 64, 84, 92, and 96 theoretically can continue one more step by double electron capture (to Ni, Kr, Zr, and Mo respectively), but this has never been observed.

Alpha number nuclide Stable/radioactive decay mode half-life product(s) of decay (bold is stable) alpha decay energy
1
2He
Stable
2
4Be
Radioactive α 8.19(37)×10 s
2He
+0.09184MeV
3
6C
Stable -7.36659MeV
4
8O
Stable -7.16192MeV
5
10Ne
Stable -4.72985MeV
6
12Mg
Stable -9.31656MeV
7
14Si
Stable -9.98414MeV
8
16S
Stable -6.94766MeV
9
18Ar
Observationally Stable (ECEC) never seen (
16S
)
-6.64092MeV
10
20Ca
Observationally Stable (ECEC) never seen (
18Ar
)
-7.03978MeV
11
22Ti
Radioactive EC 60.0(11) y
21Sc
 → 
20Ca
-5.1271MeV
12
24Cr
Radioactive β 21.56(3) h
23V
 → 
22Ti
-7.698MeV
13
26Fe
Radioactive β 8.275(8) h
25Mn
 → 
24Cr
-7.936MeV
14
28Ni
Radioactive β 6.075(10) d
27Co
 → 
26Fe
-8.0005MeV
15
30Zn
Radioactive β 2.38(5) min
29Cu
 → 
28Ni
-2.6917MeV
16
32Ge
Radioactive β 63.7(25) s
31Ga
 → 
30Zn
-2.566MeV
17
34Se
Radioactive β 35.5(7) s
33As
 → ... → 
30Zn
-2.299MeV
18
36Kr
Radioactive β 17.16(18) s
35Br
 → ... → 
32Ge
-2.176MeV
19
38Sr
Radioactive β 7.89(7) s
37Rb
 → ... → 
34Se
-2.73MeV
20
40Zr
Radioactive β 4.6(6) s
39Y
 → ... → 
36Kr
-3.70MeV
21
42Mo
Radioactive β 3.8(9) ms
41Nb
 → ... → 
38Sr
-2.71MeV
22
44Ru
Radioactive β 1.3(3) s
43Tc
 → ... → 
38Sr
-2.27MeV
23
46Pd
Radioactive β 1.1(3) s
45Rh
 → ... → 
42Mo
-2.28MeV
24
48Cd
Radioactive β ~1 s
47Ag
 → ... → 
44Ru
-3.03MeV
25
50Sn
Radioactive β 1.1(4) s
49In
 → ... → 
44Ru
-3.47MeV
26
52Te
Radioactive α <18 ns
50Sn
 → ... → 
44Ru
+5.10MeV
27
54Xe
Radioactive α 58
−23 μs

52Te
 → 
50Sn
 → ... → 
44Ru
+4.57MeV

As of 2024, the heaviest known alpha nuclide is xenon-108.

References

  1. Appenzeller; Harwit; Kippenhahn; Strittmatter; Trimble, eds. (1998). Astrophysics Library (3rd ed.). New York: Springer.
  2. Carroll, Bradley W. & Ostlie, Dale A. (2007). An Introduction to Modern Stellar Astrophysics. Addison Wesley, San Francisco. ISBN 978-0-8053-0348-3.
  3. John Avison (November 2014). The World of Physics. Nelson Thornes. pp. 397–. ISBN 978-0-17-438733-6.
  4. Audi, G.; Kondev, F. G.; Wang, M.; Huang, W. J.; Naimi, S. (2017). "The NUBASE2016 evaluation of nuclear properties" (PDF). Chinese Physics C. 41 (3): 030001. Bibcode:2017ChPhC..41c0001A. doi:10.1088/1674-1137/41/3/030001.
  5. Wang, Meng; Huang, W.J.; Kondev, F.G.; Audi, G.; Naimi, S. (2021). "The AME 2020 atomic mass evaluation (II). Tables, graphs and references". Chinese Physics C. 45 (3): 030003. doi:10.1088/1674-1137/abddaf.
  6. Auranen, K.; et al. (2018). "Superallowed α decay to doubly magic Sn" (PDF). Physical Review Letters. 121 (18): 182501. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.182501. PMID 30444390.
Category: