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General information about Magnesium |
| radium |
| Ra |
| 88 |
| alkaline earth metals |
| 2 |
| 7 |
| s |
| silvery white metallic |
| (226) g·mol-1 |
1s2 2s2p6 3s2p6d10 4s2p6d10f14
5s2p6d10 6s2p6 7s2 |
| 2, 8, 18, 32, 18, 8, 2 |
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Physical properties of Radium |
| solid |
| 5.5 g/cm-3 |
| 973(K), 700°C, 1292°F |
| 2010(K), 1737°C, 3159°F |
| ? |
| ? |
| 8.5 kJ·mol-1 |
| 113 kJ·mol-1 |
| ? J·mol-1·K-1 |
| 0.9 (Pauling scale) |
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Atomic structure of Radium |
| ? Å |
| 45.2 cm³/mol |
| ? Å |
| 12.8 |
| Cubic body centered |
| 143 (+2e) |
| 7s2 |
| 88 |
| 138 |
| 88 |
| 2 |
| 7s2 |
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Electron dot
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Other languages |
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| Latin: |
Radium |
| Czech: |
Radium |
| Croatian: |
Radij |
| French: |
Radium |
| German: |
Radium - s |
| Italian: |
Radio |
| Norwegian: |
Radium |
| Portuguese: |
Rádio |
| Spanish: |
Radio |
| Swedish: |
Radium |
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| Element |
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88 |
2
8
18
32
18
8
2
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Ra |
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(226) |
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Brief description |
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Radium is an alkaline earth metal. Radium has a melting point of 700C, boiling point of 1140C, specific gravity estimated to be 5, and valence of 2. Pure radium metal is bright white when freshly prepared, although it blackens upon exposure to air. The element decomposes in water. It is somewhat more volatile than the element barium. Radium and its salts exhibit luminescence and impart a carmine color to flame. Radium emits alpha, beta, and gamma rays. It produces neutrons when mixed with beryllium. A single gram of Ra-226 decays at the rate of 3.7x1010 disintegrations per second. [The curie (Ci) is defined to be the quantity of radioactivity which has the same rate of disintegration as 1 gram of Ra-226.] A gram of radium produces around 0.0001 ml (STP) of radon gas (emanation) per day and about 1000 calories per year. Radium loses about 1% of its activity over 25 years, with lead as its final disintegration product. Radium is a radiological hazard. Stored radium requires ventilation to prevent the build-up of radon gas.
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Uses of Radium |
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Radium has been used to produce neutron sources, luminous paints, and medical radioisotopes.
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Hystory of Radium |
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- Discoverer: Pierre and Marie Curie
- Discovery Location: France/Poland
- Discovery Year: 1898
- Name Origin: Latin radius: ray
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