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Fermium [Fm]
CAS-ID: 7440-72-4
An: 100 N: 157
Am: [257] g/mol
Group Name: Actinoid
Block: f-block  Period: 7 (actinoid)
State: presumably a solid at 298 K
Colour: unknown, but probably metallic and silvery white or grey in appearance Classification: Metallic
Boiling Point: unknown
Melting Point: 1800K (1527°C)
Density: unknown
Discovery Information
Who: A. Ghiorso, A: Los Alamos, U of California
When: 1953
Where: United States
Name Origin
After the scientist Enrico Fermi.
 "Fermium" in different languages.
Sources
Completely synthetic element. Produced by bombarding lighter transuranium elements with still lighter particles or by neutron capture. 253Fm can be produced in nanogram (10-9) quantities by bombarding 239Pu with neutrons.
Uses
None.
History
Fermium (after Enrico Fermi) was first discovered by a team led by Albert Ghiorso in 1952. The team found 255Fm in the debris of the first hydrogen bomb explosion (see Operation Ivy). That isotope was created when 238U combined with 17 neutrons in the intense temperature and pressure of the explosion (eight beta decays also occurred to create the element). The work was overseen by the University of California Radiation Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory, and Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory whose team members included Ghiorso, Stanley G. Thompson, Gary H. Higgins, Glenn T. Seaborg (from the Radiation Laboratory and Department of Chemistry of the University of California), Martin H. Studier, P.R. Fields, Sherman M. Fried, H. Diamond, J.F. Mech, G.L. Pyle, John R. Huizenga, A. Hirsch, W.M. Manning (from the Argonne National Laboratory), C.I. Browne, H. Louise Smith, and R.W. Spence (from the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory). Samples of sea coral impacted from the first thermonuclear explosion of November 1952 were used.
All these findings were kept secret until 1955 due to Cold War tensions, however. In late 1953 and early 1954 a team from the Nobel Institute of Physics in Stockholm bombarded a 238U target with 16O ions, producing an alpha-emitter with an atomic weight of ~250 and with 100 protons (in other words, element 250100). The Nobel team did not claim discovery but the isotope they produced was later positively identified as 250Fm.
Notes
Fermium's chemical properties are largely unknown. Fermium is a radioactive rare earth metal. The longest living isotope is 257Fm with a half-life of 80 days. It is of no commercial importance.