Radium is a chemical element, which has the symbol Ra and atomic number 88 (see the periodic table).
Its appearance is almost pure white, but it readily oxidizes on exposure to air, turning black. Radium is an alkaline earth metal
that is found in trace amounts in uranium ores. It is extremely radioactive. Its most stable isotope, Ra-226, has a half-life of 1602 years and decays into radon gas.
Notable characteristics
The heaviest of the
alkaline earth metals, radium is intensely radioactive and resembles
Barium chemically. This metal is found (combined) in minute quantities in the uranium ore
pitchblende, and various other uranium
minerals. Radium preparations are remarkable for maintaining themselves at a higher
temperature than their surroundings, and for their radiations, which are of three kinds:
alpha particles,
beta particles, and
gamma rays. Radium also produces
neutrons when mixed with
beryllium.
When freshly prepared, pure radium metal is brilliant white, but blackens when exposed to air (probably due to nitride formation). Radium is luminescent (giving a faint blue color), corrodes in water to form radium hydroxide and is slightly more volatile than barium.
Applications
Some of the practical uses of radium are derived from its radiative properties. More recently discovered
radioisotopes, such as
cobalt-60 and
caesium-137, are replacing radium in even these limited uses because several of these are much more powerful and others are safer to handle.
- Formerly used in self-luminous paints for watches, clocks and instrument dials. More than 100 former watch dial painters who used their lips to shape the paintbrush died from the radiation. (See Radium Girls). Soon afterward, the adverse effects of radioactivity became widely known. Radium was still used in dials as late as the 1950's. Objects painted with this paint may still be dangerous, and must be handled properly. Currently, tritium is used instead of radium. Although tritium still carries some risks, it is considered by many to be safer than radium.
- When mixed with Beryllium it is a neutron source for physics experiments.
- Radium (usually in the form of radium chloride) is used in medicine to produce radon gas which in turn is used as a cancer treatment.
- Radium-223 is currently under investigation for use in medicine as cancer treatment of bone metastasis.
- One unit for radioactivity, the non-SI curie, is based on the radioactivity of radium-226 (see Radioactivity).
- At the turn of the 20th century radium was a popular additive in products like toothpaste, hair creams, and even food items due to its supposed curative powers. Such products soon fell out of vogue, and were prohibited by authorities in many countries, after it was discovered they could have real and serious adverse health effects. (See for instance Radithor.)
- Spas featuring radium-rich water are still occasionally touted as beneficial, such as those in Misasa, Tottori, Japan.
History
Radium (Latin radius, ray) was
discovered by
Maria Skłodowska-Curie and her husband
Pierre in
1898 in pitchblende/
uraninite from North
Bohemia (area around
Jáchymov). While studying pitchblende the Curies removed
uranium from it and found that the remaining material was still
radioactive. They then separated out a radioactive mixture mostly consisting of
barium which gave a
brilliant red flame color and
spectral lines which had never been documented before. In
1902 radium was isolated into its pure
metal by Curie and
Andre Debierne through the
electrolysis of a pure radium
chloride solution by using a
mercury cathode and
distilling in an atmosphere of
hydrogen gas.
Historically the decay products of radium were known as Radium A, B, C, etc. These are now known to be isotopes of other elements as follows:
- Radium emanation - radon-222
- Radium A - polonium-218
- Radium B - lead-214
- Radium C - bismuth-214
- Radium C1 - polonium-214
- Radium C2 - thallium-210
- Radium D - lead-210
- Radium E - bismuth-210
- Radium F - polonium 210
On February 4, 1936 radium E became the first radioactive element to be made synthetically.
During the 1930s it was found that worker exposure to radium by handling luminescent paints caused serious health effects which included sores, anemia and bone cancer. This use of radium was stopped soon afterward. This is because radium is treated as calcium by the body, and deposited in the bones, where radioactivity degrades marrow, and can mutate bone cells. Handling of radium has since been blamed for Marie Curie's premature death.
Occurrence
Radium is a
decay product of uranium and is therefore found in all uranium-bearing
ores. Radium was originally acquired from
pitchblende ore from
Joachimsthal, Bohemia (7
metric tons of pitchblende yields 1
gram of radium).
Carnotite sands in
Colorado provide some of the element, but richer ores are found in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, the
Great Lakes area of
Canada and can also be extracted from uranium processing waste. Large uranium deposits are located in
Ontario,
New Mexico,
Utah,
Australia, and in other places.
Compounds
Its
compounds
color flames
crimson carmine (rich red or crimson color with a shade of purple) and give a characteristic
spectrum. Due to its geologically short
half life and intense radioactivity, radium compounds are quite rare, occurring almost exclusively in uranium ores.
See also Radium compounds.
Isotopes
Radium has 25 different
isotopes, four of which are found in nature, with radium-226 being the most common. Ra-223, Ra-224, Ra-226 and Ra-228 are all generated in the decay of either
U or
Th. Ra-226 is a product of U-238 decay, and is the longest-lived isotope of radium with a
half-life of 1602 years; next longest is Ra-228, a product of Th-232 breakdown, with a half-life of 6.7 years.
Radioactivity
Radium is over one million times more radioactive than the same mass of
uranium. Its decay occurs in at least seven stages; the successive main products have been studied and were called radium emanation or exradio (this is
radon), radium A (
polonium), radium B (
lead), radium C (
bismuth), etc. (The radon is a heavy gas, the later products are solids.) These products are themselves radioactive elements, each with an atomic weight a little lower than its predecessor.
Radium loses about 1% of its activity in 25 years, being transformed into elements of lower atomic weight with lead being a final product of disintegration.
The SI unit of radioactivity is the becquerel (Bq), equal to one disintegration per second. The curie is a non-SI unit defined as that amount of radioactivity which has the same disintegration rate as 1 gram of Ra-226 (3.7 x 1010 disintegrations per second, or 37 GBq).
Precautions
Radium is highly radioactive and its decay product,
radon gas is also radioactive. Since radium is chemically similar to calcium, it has the potential to cause great harm by replacing it in the
bone. Inhalation, injection, ingestion or body exposure to radium can cause cancer and other body disorders. Stored radium should be ventilated to prevent accumulation of radon.
Emitted energy from the decay of radium ionizes gases, affects photographic plates, causes sores on the skin, and produces many other detrimental effects.
Further reading
- Scientific American (Macklis RM, The great radium scandal. Sci.Am. 1993 Aug: 269(2):94-99)
- Clark, Claudia. (1987). Radium Girls: Women and Industrial Health Reform, 1910-1935. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0807846406.
- Ken Silverstein, Harper's Magazine, November 1998; The radioactive boy scout: when a teenager attempts to build a breeder reactor - case of David Hahn who managed to secure materials and equipment from businesses and information from government officials to develop an atomic energy radiation project for his Boy Scout merit-badge.
- Decay chains (with some examples including Radium)
References
External links
Chemical elements | Alkaline earth metals
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