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Roentgenium [Rg]
CAS-ID: 54386-24-2
An: 111 N: 161
Am: [272] g/mol
Group No: 11
Group Name: none.
Block: d-block  Period: 7
State: presumably a solid at 298 K
Colour: Unknown, but probably metallic and silvery white or grey in appearance. Man made radioactive metal. Classification: Metallic
Boiling Point: unknown
Melting Point: unknown
Density: unknown
Availability: Roentgenium is not commercially available
Discovery Information
Who: GSI
When: 1994
Where: Darmstadt, West Germany
Name Origin
The name roentgenium was accepted as a permanent name on November 1, 2004 in honour of Wilhelm Rontgen; before this date, the element was known under the temporary IUPAC systematic element name "unununium".
 "Roentgenium" in different languages.
Sources
Only a few atoms of element 111 have ever been made through a nuclear reaction involving fusion of an isotope of bismuth, 209Bi, with one of nickel, 64Ni. Isolation of an observable quantity has never been achieved, and may well never be.
Uses
None.
History
It was discovered by Peter Armbruster, Gottfried Münzenberg, and their team working at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI) in Darmstadt, Germany on December 8, 1994. Only three atoms of it were observed (all 272Rg), by the fusion of bismuth-209 and nickel-64 in a linear accelerator (nickel was bombarded onto the bismuth target).
Notes
Element 111 was previously known as Unununium; from the latin for "one one one", and also eka-gold.
Hazards
Roentgenium is radioactive.