Dictionary Definition
actinide n : any of a series of radioactive
elements with atomic numbers 89 through 103 [syn: actinoid, actinon]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Any of the 14 radioactive elements of the periodic table that are positioned under the lanthanides to which they have similar chemistry.
Translations
a chemical element positioned under the
lanthanides in the periodic table
- Croatian: aktinid
- Spanish: actínido
See also
- thorium
- protactinium
- uranium
- neptunium
- plutonium
- americium
- curium
- berkelium
- californium
- einsteinium
- fermium
- mendelevium
- nobelium
- lawrencium
Anagrams
Extensive Definition
The actinoid (according to IUPAC terminology)
(previously actinide) series encompasses the 15 chemical
elements that lie between actinium and lawrencium included on the
periodic
table, with atomic
numbers 89 - 103. The actinoid series derives its name from the
first element in the series, actinium, and ultimately from the
Greek ακτις (aktis), "ray," reflecting the elements'
radioactivity.
The actinoid series (An) is included in some
definitions of the rare
earth elements. IUPAC is currently
recommending the name actinoid rather than actinide, as the suffix
"-ide" generally indicates ions (moreover, from Latin, the
suffix -ide means "sons of actinium", while -oid means "similar to
actinium"). There are alternative arrangements of the periodic
table that exclude actinium or lawrencium from appearing together
with the other actinoids.
The actinoids display less similarity in their
chemical properties than the lanthanoid series (Ln),
exhibiting a wider range of oxidation
states, which initially led to confusion as to whether
actinium, thorium, and uranium should be considered d-block
elements. All actinoids are radioactive.
Only thorium and uranium occur naturally in the
earth's crust in anything more than trace quantities. Neptunium and
plutonium have been known to show up naturally in trace amounts in
uranium ores as a result of decay or bombardment. The remaining
actinoids were discovered in nuclear fallout, or were synthesized
in particle colliders. The latter half of the series possess
exceedingly short half-lives.
The actinoids are typically placed below the main
body of the periodic table (below the lanthanoid series), in the
manner of a footnote. The full-width
version of the periodic table shows the position of the
actinoids more clearly.
An organometallic
compound of an actinoid is known as an organoactinoid.
History of the actinoid series
From the earlier known chemical properties of actinium (89) up to uranium (92), indicating a relation to the transition metals, it was generally assumed that the transuraniums would have similar qualities. During his Manhattan Project research in 1944, Glenn T. Seaborg experienced unexpected difficulty isolating americium (95) and curium (96). He began wondering if these elements more properly belonged to a different series than the transition metals, which would explain why the expected chemical properties of the new elements were different. In 1945, he went against the advice of colleagues and proposed the most significant change to Mendeleev's periodic table to have been accepted universally by the scientific community: the actinide series.In 1945, Seaborg published his actinide
concept of heavy element electronic structure, predicting that
the actinoids would form a transition series analogous to the rare
earth series of lanthanoid elements.
In 1961, Antoni Przybylski discovered a star
that contained unusually high amounts of actinoids.
See also
References
External links
- The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition.
- Chemical Elements website
- Actinides on the Book Rags website
- Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory image of historic periodic table by Seaborg showing actinide series for the first time
- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Uncovering the Secrets of the Actinides
- Los Alamos National Laboratory, Actinide Research Quarterly
actinide in Afrikaans: Aktinied
actinide in Arabic: أكتينيدات
actinide in Asturian: Actínidu
actinide in Bosnian: Aktinoidi
actinide in Catalan: Actínid
actinide in Chuvash: Актиноидсем
actinide in Czech: Aktinoidy
actinide in Danish: Actinid
actinide in German: Actinoide
actinide in Estonian: Aktinoidid
actinide in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ακτινίδες
actinide in Spanish: Actínido
actinide in Esperanto: Aktinoido
actinide in Basque: Aktinoide
actinide in Persian: آکتینید
actinide in French: Actinide
actinide in Galician: Actínidos
actinide in Korean: 악티늄족
actinide in Croatian: Aktinoidi
actinide in Indonesian: Aktinida
actinide in Icelandic: Aktiníð
actinide in Italian: Attinoidi
actinide in Hebrew: אקטיניד
actinide in Javanese: Aktinida
actinide in Lithuanian: Aktinoidai
actinide in Lombard: Attinid
actinide in Malayalam: ആക്റ്റിനൈഡുകള്
actinide in Malay (macrolanguage):
Aktinida
actinide in Dutch: Actinide
actinide in Japanese: アクチノイド
actinide in Norwegian: Aktinoider
actinide in Norwegian Nynorsk: Aktinid
actinide in Low German: Actinoid
actinide in Polish: Aktynowce
actinide in Portuguese: Actinídio
actinide in Romanian: Actinide
actinide in Quechua: Aktinyu rikch'aq
q'illay
actinide in Russian: Актиноиды
actinide in Simple English: Actinide
actinide in Slovak: Aktinoid
actinide in Serbian: Актиноиди
actinide in Serbo-Croatian: Aktinoidi
actinide in Finnish: Aktinoidi
actinide in Swedish: Aktinoider
actinide in Thai: แอกทิไนด์
actinide in Vietnamese: Nhóm Actini
actinide in Turkish: Aktinit
actinide in Ukrainian: Актиноїди
actinide in Contenese: 錒系元素
actinide in Chinese: 锕系元素