Chemical properties of Lawrencium - Health effects of Lawrencium - Environmental effects of Lawrencium

Atomic number

103

Atomic mass

(262) g.mol -1

Electronegativity according to Pauling

unknown

Density

unknown

Melting point

unknown

Boiling point

unknown

Vanderwaals radius 

unknown

Ionic radius

unknown

Isotopes

1

Electronic shell

[ Rn ] 5f14 6d1 7s2

Discovered by

Albert Ghiorso in 1961

   

Lawrencium

Lawrencium is the second transferium element with the most stable isotope 262 Lr having a half-life of 216 minutes. It's chemical data are limited to its atomic number, its haf life and isotopes. Atomic weight of known its 11 isotopes range from 252 to 262. It is named after Ernest O. Lawrence, the inventor of the cyclotron, the research instrument with which several new elements havve been first produced.

Applications

The transferium elements have neither application nor economic role.

Lawrencium in the environment

The transferium elements do not exist in nature and they have very unstable nuclei, so they are quite hard to make and detect.

Health effects of Lawrencium

Lawrencium doesn’t occur naturally, it has not yet been found in the earth’s crust and it’s so unstable that any amount formed would decompose to other elements very quickly. Therefore, there is no reason to consider its health hazards.

Environmental effects of Lawrencium

Due to its short half-life, there’s no reason for considering the effects of Lawrencium in the environment.