🔹 Basic Information
- Element Name: Flerovium
- Discovered By: Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (Russia) & Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (USA)
- Year of Discovery: First synthesized in 1998; officially named in 2012
- Category: Post-transition Metal / Superheavy Element
- Group: 14 (Same group as carbon, silicon, lead)
- State at Room Temperature: Unknown (likely solid or possibly volatile) ❓
Flerovium is a man-made, radioactive element created in a laboratory. It’s part of the group of superheavy elements.
🔸 Chemical Properties
- Chemical Symbol: Fl
- Atomic Number: 114
- Atomic Mass: ~289 u (most stable isotope)
- Valency: Predicted: +2, +4
- Electronic Configuration: [Rn] 5f¹⁴ 6d¹⁰ 7s² 7p² (predicted)
Though it sits under lead on the periodic table, flerovium may not act like a typical metal due to relativistic effects that influence its electrons.
📘 Basic Things to Know
Flerovium is named after the Flerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions in Russia, honoring physicist Georgy Flerov, a pioneer in nuclear science 🇷🇺.
🤔 Interesting Facts
- Only a few atoms of flerovium have ever been created, each existing for just seconds or milliseconds ⏱️
- It was made by bombarding plutonium with calcium nuclei in a particle accelerator 💥
- Some scientists believe it might be more like a noble gas in behavior than a metal 🤔
- It plays a big role in exploring the “island of stability”, where superheavy elements might live longer ⚛️
- Its chemistry is mostly theoretical because it’s so hard to study directly
🔧 Common Uses
⚠️ Flerovium has no commercial or practical uses due to its extreme rarity and short half-life.
- Scientific Research: Helps scientists explore superheavy element creation and decay 🔬
- Periodic Table Studies: Used to understand the behavior of very heavy elements
- Nuclear Physics: Helps test models of atomic structure and nuclear stability
📚 Conclusion
Flerovium is a superheavy and short-lived element that exists only in the lab. For students, it shows how science is always pushing boundaries and discovering new parts of the universe, one atom at a time! 🌟🧪