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Berkelium [Bk]
CAS-ID: 7440-40-6
An: 97 N: 150
Am: [247] g/mol
Group Name: Actinoid
Block: f-block  Period: 7 (actinoid)
State: solid
Colour: unknown, but probably metallic and silvery white or grey in appearance Classification: Metallic
Boiling Point: unknown
Melting Point: 1259K (986°C)
Density: (alpha) 14.78g/cm3
Density: (beta) 13.25g/cm3
Discovery Information
Who: G.T.Seaborg, S.G.Tompson, A. Ghiorso
When: 1949
Where: United States
Name Origin
After Berkeley the home town of the University of California.
 "Berkelium" in different languages.
Sources
Some compounds have been made and studied. Made by bombarding americium with alpha particles.
Uses
Berkelium has no known uses outside of basic research.
History
Berkelium was first synthesized by Glenn T. Seaborg, Albert Ghiorso, Stanley G. Thompson, and Kenneth Street, Jr at the University of California, Berkeley in December 1949. The team used a cyclotron to bombard a milligram-sized target of 241Am with alpha particles to produce 243Bk (half-life 4.5 hours) and two free neutrons. One of the longest lived isotopes of the element, 249Bk (half-life 330 days), was later synthesized by subjecting a 244Cm target with an intense beam of neutrons.
Notes
Weighable amounts of 249Bk (half-life 314 days) make it possible to determine some of its properties using macroscopic quantities.
Berkelium is a radioactive rare earth metal. It is named after the University of California at Berkeley (USA). Apparently, berkelium tends to accumulate in the skeletal system.
It is of no commercial importance and only a few of its compounds are known.
Hazards
Berkelium is radioactive. Like other actinoids, berkelium bio-accumulates in skeletal tissue.