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    Meet Francium - The Element So Radioactive That It Hardly Exists

    By Benjamin Taub,

    17 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4CYDoQ_0w7oNn1b00

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2CT1tY_0w7oNn1b00
    Francium-223 has a half-life of just 22 minutes. Image credit: Intothelight Photography/Shutterstock.com

    Take a look at the first column of the periodic table. The elements in this group include some of the most common and useful ones on the planet - and they probably all wish they weren’t associated with francium.

    Sitting at the bottom of this row of chemical workhorses, this spectacularly radioactive element would be toxic to anyone who came near it, if only it could stop itself from vanishing. In fact, it's estimated that there’s never more than about 28 grams (1 ounce) of the stuff in Earth's crust at any given time, and no one has ever managed to obtain a weighable quantity of the elusive metal, let alone see it.

    So while other alkali metals play key parts in important stuff such as batteries and cellular processes, francium has absolutely no known uses and doesn’t appear to play any biological function. It’s so rare and short-lived that scientists who want to study the element have to create their own by bombarding radium with neutrons or thorium with protons.

    For many years, the very existence of francium was a matter of conjecture. It was Dmitri Mendeleev - the father of the periodic table - who first theorized that there might be an undiscovered alkali metal lurking somewhere in the universe with an atomic number of 87. This sparked a frantic and highly competitive quest to discover the hypothetical element, with numerous prominent scientists claiming to have found it, only to later have their results disproven.

    As it happens, the metal’s only naturally-occurring isotope - francium-223 - forms during the radioactive decay of actinium. In 1939, it was detected for the very first time by a French woman named Marguerite Perey who worked with actinium at the Institut du Radium in Paris and had once served as Marie Curie ’s personal assistant.

    What had previously been known simply as “element 87” was subsequently renamed "francium" in honor of Perey’s home country, which also lends its name to the element gallium.

    Observations made after its discovery revealed that francium-223 has a half-life of just 22 minutes, which means it takes this long for half of the atoms in a sample of francium to decay. For context, uranium-235 - a radioactive isotope used to fuel nuclear power plants - has a half-life of around 700 million years .

    Given how radioactive it is, one can only imagine the havoc that francium could wreak on the human body. Fortunately, there’s so little of the stuff around that you don’t have to worry (unless you happen to work with it).

    This article was first published on IFLScience: Meet Francium - The Element So Radioactive That It Hardly Exists .  For more interesting science content, check out our latest stories .  Never miss a story by subscribing to our science newsletter here .
    Comments / 6
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    Paul Miklo
    11h ago
    Uranium, Plutonium, Gallium, Francium, and these radioactive elements all end in um. I discovered the rarest element of all and it is....UM....let me think for a moment. What the heck is it called??? UM...UM... Dang it, I forgot.
    Jacob
    14h ago
    Nonsense. I feed my chickens Francium mixed in with their wheat twice a week, and I am sure that the fact that they are 14 feet tall and have 9 drumsticks apiece is purely a coincidence. I'd prove it to you, but I can't catch any of them...
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