| Literature DB >> 34917588 |
A Yakushev1,2, L Lens1,3, Ch E Düllmann1,2,3, M Block1,2,3, H Brand1, T Calverley4, M Dasgupta5, A Di Nitto1,3, M Götz1,2,3, S Götz1,2,3, H Haba6, L Harkness-Brennan4, R-D Herzberg4, F P Heßberger1,2, D Hinde5, A Hübner1, E Jäger1, D Judson4, J Khuyagbaatar1,2, B Kindler1, Y Komori6, J Konki7, J V Kratz3, J Krier1, N Kurz1, M Laatiaoui1,2, B Lommel1, Christian Lorenz8, M Maiti9, A K Mistry1,2, Ch Mokry2,3, Y Nagame10, P Papadakis7, A Såmark-Roth8, D Rudolph8, J Runke1,3, L G Sarmiento8, T K Sato10, M Schädel1, P Scharrer1,2,3, B Schausten1, J Steiner1, P Thörle-Pospiech2,3, A Toyoshima10, N Trautmann3, J Uusitalo7, A Ward4, M Wegrzecki11, V Yakusheva1,2.
Abstract
Nihonium (Nh, element 113) and flerovium (Fl, element 114) are the first superheavy elements in which the 7p shell is occupied. High volatility and inertness were predicted for Fl due to the strong relativistic stabilization of the closed 7p 1/2 sub-shell, which originates from a large spin-orbit splitting between the 7p 1/2 and 7p 3/2 orbitals. One unpaired electron in the outermost 7p 1/2 sub-shell in Nh is expected to give rise to a higher chemical reactivity. Theoretical predictions of Nh reactivity are discussed, along with results of the first experimental attempts to study Nh chemistry in the gas phase. The experimental observations verify a higher chemical reactivity of Nh atoms compared to its neighbor Fl and call for the development of advanced setups. First tests of a newly developed detection device miniCOMPACT with highly reactive Fr isotopes assure that effective chemical studies of Nh are within reach.Entities:
Keywords: TASCA; element 113; gas phase chromatography; nihonium; physical preseparation; superheavy elements
Year: 2021 PMID: 34917588 PMCID: PMC8669335 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2021.753738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
FIGURE 1Experimental setups used in the Nh chemistry experiments: (A)–setup used in the pioneering experiments at the FLNR without pre-separation (Dmitriev et al., 2014; Türler et al., 2015); (B)–setup used in the FLNR experiment behind the DGFRS (Aksenov et al., 2017); (C)–setup used at the GSI behind the TASCA separator (this work).
FIGURE 2Time distribution for the time difference between the start of 0.1 s-long irradiations and the time of decay-in-flight, measured for 182,183Hg in the first COMPACT array (yellow bars). The red dashed line is a lognormal-distribution fit function with the peak position at 0.35 s. The black dashed-dotted line represents the time-dependent function for the integrated experimental flushed-out fraction of 182,183Hg detected in the first COMPACT array within a 3 s period after the start of irradiation.
FIGURE 3Pictures of the RTC-miniCOMPACT setup showing the RTC (A) and the open Au-covered miniCOMPACT array (B). The inner volume of the RTC is 40 × 60 × 20 mm3; the exit slit (1) is 10 × 1 mm2. One half of the detector channel is made up of eight pairs of silicon PIN diodes (2) (10 × 10 mm2) mounted on a PCB (3). The spacer (4) keeps the distance of 1.6 mm between top and bottom detectors in the closed array.