Astatine
Astatine
melting point: 302°C
boiling point: 337°C
density: unknown
most common ions: At−, AtO−, AtO3−
Astatine is a radioactive halogen (the heaviest of the halogen elements) and is a solid at room temperature. Dale R. Carson, K. R. MacKenzie, and Emilio Segrè of the University of California produced the element in 1940 by bombarding an isotope of bismuth (209Bi) with alpha particles. The origin of the name "astatine" is the Greek word astatos, which means "unstable."
Astatine is found in only vanishingly small amounts in nature—it is believed that only 30 grams (1 ounce) of the element are present in Earth's crust at any one time. It is produced naturally when the elements uranium and thorium decay. Astatine can also be produced in a nuclear reactor by the method used by its discoverers, according to the following reaction:
209 83Bi + 42 He → 211 85At + 2 10n
The most stable isotope of astatine is 210At, which has a half-life of 8.1 hours. Other isotopes have mass numbers ranging from 193 to 223 and half-lives ranging from 125 nanoseconds (213At) to 7.2 hours (211At). Astatine is known to form interhalogen compounds with bromine (AtBr), chlorine (AtCl), and iodine (AtI). Additional compounds (HAt and CH3At) have also been detected.
Because of its scarcity and short half-life, there were no commercial uses for astatine as of 2003. Researchers are investigating astatine as a means of treating various cancers (e.g., lethal brain tumors) and diseases. Because of its similarities to iodine, which accumulates in the thyroid, it is believed that the element could be utilized to treat certain thyroid diseases.
see also Halogens; Radioactivity.
Stephanie Dionne Sherk
Bibliography
Lide, David R., ed. (2003). The CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 84th edition. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.
Internet Resources
Gagnon, Steve. "It's Elemental: Astatine." Jefferson Lab. Available from <http://education.jlab.org/itselemental/iso085.html>.
astatine
astatine
as·ta·tine / ˈastəˌtēn; -tin/ • n. the chemical element of atomic number 85, a radioactive member of the halogen group. (Symbol: At)