Technetium is a chemical element with symbol Tc
and atomic number 43. It is the element with the lowest atomic number in the periodic
table that has no stable isotopes: every form of it is radioactive. Nearly all
technetium is produced synthetically, and only minute amounts are found in
nature. Naturally occurring technetium occurs as a spontaneous fission product
in uranium ore or by neutron capture in molybdenum ores. The chemical
properties of this silvery gray, crystalline transition metal are intermediate
between rhenium and manganese.
Many of technetium's properties were predicted by Dmitri Mendeleev before the element was discovered. Mendeleev noted a gap in his periodic table and gave the undiscovered element the provisional name ekamanganese (Em). In 1937, technetium (specifically the technetium-97 isotope) became the first predominantly artificial element to be produced, hence its name (from the Greek τεχνητός, meaning "artificial").
Its short-lived gamma ray-emitting nuclear isomer—technetium-99m—is used in nuclear medicine for a wide variety of diagnostic tests. Technetium-99 is used as a gamma ray-free source of beta particles. Long-lived technetium isotopes produced commercially are by-products of fission of uranium-235 in nuclear reactors and are extracted from nuclear fuel rods. Because no isotope of technetium has a half-life longer than 4.2 million years (technetium-98), its detection in 1952 in red giants, which are billions of years old, helped bolster the theory that stars can produce heavier elements.
The discovery of element 43 was finally confirmed in a December 1936 experiment at theUniversity of Palermo
in Sicily
conducted by Carlo Perrier and Emilio Segrè. In mid-1936, Segrè visited the United States , first Columbia
University in New
York and then the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California . He persuaded
cyclotron inventor Ernest Lawrence to let him take back some discarded
cyclotron parts that had become radioactive. Lawrence mailed him a molybdenum foil that
had been part of the deflector in the cyclotron.
Segrè enlisted his colleague Perrier to attempt to prove, through comparative chemistry, that the molybdenum activity was indeed from an element with Z = 43. They succeeded in isolating the isotopes technetium-95m and technetium-97.University
of Palermo officials wanted them to
name their discovery "panormium", after the Latin name for Palermo , Panormus.
In 1947 element 43 was named after the Greek word τεχνητός, meaning
"artificial", since it was the first element to be artificially
produced. Segrè returned to Berkeley
and met Glenn T. Seaborg. They isolated the metastable isotope technetium-99m,
which is now used in some ten million medical diagnostic procedures annually.
In 1952, astronomer Paul W. Merrill inCalifornia
detected the spectral signature of technetium (specifically wavelengths of
403.1 nm, 423.8 nm, 426.2 nm, and 429.7 nm) in light from S-type
red giants. The stars were near the end of their lives, yet were rich in this
short-lived element, meaning nuclear reactions within the stars must be
producing it. This evidence was used to bolster the then-unproven theory that
stars are where nucleosynthesis of the heavier elements occurs. More recently,
such observations provided evidence that elements were being formed by neutron
capture in the s-process.
Since its discovery, there have been many searches in terrestrial materials for natural sources of technetium. In 1962, technetium-99 was isolated and identified in pitchblende from theBelgian Congo in extremely small quantities (about
0.2 ng/kg); there it originates as a spontaneous fission product of uranium-238.
There is also evidence that the Oklo natural nuclear fission reactor produced
significant amounts of technetium-99, which have since decayed into ruthenium-99.
Many of technetium's properties were predicted by Dmitri Mendeleev before the element was discovered. Mendeleev noted a gap in his periodic table and gave the undiscovered element the provisional name ekamanganese (Em). In 1937, technetium (specifically the technetium-97 isotope) became the first predominantly artificial element to be produced, hence its name (from the Greek τεχνητός, meaning "artificial").
Its short-lived gamma ray-emitting nuclear isomer—technetium-99m—is used in nuclear medicine for a wide variety of diagnostic tests. Technetium-99 is used as a gamma ray-free source of beta particles. Long-lived technetium isotopes produced commercially are by-products of fission of uranium-235 in nuclear reactors and are extracted from nuclear fuel rods. Because no isotope of technetium has a half-life longer than 4.2 million years (technetium-98), its detection in 1952 in red giants, which are billions of years old, helped bolster the theory that stars can produce heavier elements.
Official Discovery
The discovery of element 43 was finally confirmed in a December 1936 experiment at the
Segrè enlisted his colleague Perrier to attempt to prove, through comparative chemistry, that the molybdenum activity was indeed from an element with Z = 43. They succeeded in isolating the isotopes technetium-95m and technetium-97.
In 1952, astronomer Paul W. Merrill in
Since its discovery, there have been many searches in terrestrial materials for natural sources of technetium. In 1962, technetium-99 was isolated and identified in pitchblende from the
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