Interesting Facts About Plutonium

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• Discovery of Plutonium
It was summer of the year 1940, that Glen Seaborg, Arthur Wahl, and Joseph Kennedy, a team of chemist from the University of California, Berkeley, began their research for element 94; Neptunium is their first discovery. After a year, they became successful in their research by bombarding another element, Uranium, they had discovered the element Plutonium.

• Plutonium (Pu)
Plutonium was the 94th element to be discovered. It is a man—made trans- uranic element discovered by researchers in Berkeley, USA. Plutonium-238 was the first isotope to be made, which are produced from Uranium-238. Plutonium is an essential element for producing nuclear bombs, which is why it was said that the discovery of Plutonium was a work of the devil.

• Fat Man
Fat Man, one of the nuclear bombs that help end the World War II, was a Plutonium bomb. The bomb that was dropped in Nagasaki by an American bomber in August 9, 1945 weighs over 4,050 kilograms. It had a power equal to 22 kilotons of TNT, and destroyed thousands of infrastructures. Thousands of people lost their lives and those who survived were left damaged physically and mentally.

• Nuclear Fission Isotope
The process which makes Plutonium destructive is called Nuclear Fission. The Plutonium-239 is a fissionable isotope which means that energy can be extracted from it under certain operations. Plutonium was very rare to occur naturally in nature, that’s why it is produced using breeder reactors, nowadays found in multiple countries. The longest-living isotope of Plutonium is Pu-244, which exists on more than 82 million years.

• Name Derivation
Plutonium was named after our solar system’s once called ninth planet, Pluto the dwarf planet. Other elements which are also named after the planets in the solar system are Uranus (Uranium) and Neptune (Neptunium).

• Actinides
The Actinides, also known as radioactive rare earth elements, is a series of elements found in Group 3 of the periodic table with the atomic numbers of 89 to 103. Plutonium is one of the actinides because it has an atomic number of 94. The most common actinides in the Planet are Uranium and Thorium.

• Characteristics of Plutonium
Plutonium can be found at the third group of the periodic table. It has the symbol of Pu and an atomic number of 94 which means it must also have the same number of protons and electrons. Its melting point is 640.85 C° and its boiling point is 3,229.85 C°.

• Plutonium Fuel
To make a modern power plant running, it must burn a mixture of U-235 and U-238 (Uranium isotopes) as their fuel. This is very wasteful in terms of preserving our natural resources, but economically it costs less than other source of energy. As an alternative, power plants can use Plutonium which can be extracted from the burned uranium. It produces so much energy to fuel the power plants that the world’s uranium mining can stop for over 200 years while we use up the supply that were already mined and are just kept in storage.

• A Kilogram of Plutonium
Plutonium is one of the few elements that have extraordinary properties. With only a kilogram of Plutonium, it can cause massive explosion equal to the damage of a 20,000-ton TNT can cause. Also, a kilogram of this element can produce about 22 million kilowatt hours of heat energy.

• Transuranic

Plutonium is a radio-active and metallic transuranic element which can be seen as a silvery white metal. It has a density of 19.816g and usually extracted from uranium ores that’s why it was called transuranic.

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