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radioactive isotope

chemistry
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Also known as: radioactive nuclide, radioisotope, radionuclide
Also called:
radioisotope, radionuclide, or radioactive nuclide
Top Questions

What is a radioactive isotope?

How are radioactive isotopes produced?

How are radioactive isotopes used in medicine?

radioactive isotope, any of several species of the same chemical element with different masses whose nuclei are unstable and dissipate excess energy by spontaneously emitting radiation in the form of alpha, beta, and gamma rays.

A brief treatment of radioactive isotopes follows. For full treatment, see isotope: Radioactive isotopes.

phase diagrams of helium-3 and helium-4
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isotope: Radioactive isotopes

Every chemical element has one or more radioactive isotopes. For example, hydrogen, the lightest element, has three isotopes with mass numbers 1, 2, and 3. Only hydrogen-3 (tritium), however, is a radioactive isotope, the other two being stable. More than 1,000 radioactive isotopes of the various elements are known. Approximately 50 of these are found in nature; the rest are produced artificially as the direct products of nuclear reactions or indirectly as the radioactive descendants of these products.

Radioactive isotopes have many useful applications. In medicine, for example, cobalt-60 is extensively employed as a radiation source to arrest the development of cancer. Other radioactive isotopes are used as tracers for diagnostic purposes as well as in research on metabolic processes. When a radioactive isotope is added in small amounts to comparatively large quantities of the stable element, it behaves exactly the same as the ordinary isotope chemically; it can, however, be traced with a Geiger counter or other detection device. Iodine-131 has proved effective in treating hyperthyroidism. Another medically important radioactive isotope is carbon-14, which is used in a breath test to detect the ulcer-causing bacteria Heliobacter pylori.

In industry, radioactive isotopes of various kinds are used for measuring the thickness of metal or plastic sheets; their precise thickness is indicated by the strength of the radiations that penetrate the material being inspected. They also may be employed in place of large X-ray machines to examine manufactured metal parts for structural defects. Other significant applications include the use of radioactive isotopes as compact sources of electrical power—e.g., plutonium-238 in spacecraft. In such cases, the heat produced in the decay of the radioactive isotope is converted into electricity by means of thermoelectric junction circuits or related devices.

The table lists some naturally occurring radioactive isotopes.

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Some significant naturally occurring radioactive isotopes
isotope half-life (years, unless noted)
Source: National Nuclear Data Center, Brookhaven National Laboratory, NuDat 2.6 (2016).
3H 12.32
14C 5,700
50V >2.1 × 1017
87Rb 4.81 × 1010
90Sr 28.9
115In 4.41 × 1014
123Te >9.2 × 1016
130Te >3.0 × 1024
131I 8.0252 days
137Cs 30.08
138La 1.02 × 1011
144Nd 2.29 × 1015
147Sm 1.06 × 1011
148Sm 7 × 1015
176Lu 3.76 × 1010
187Re 4.33 × 1010
186Os 2 × 1015
222Rn 3.8235 days
226Ra 1,600
230Th 75,400
232Th 1.4 × 1010
232U 68.9
234U 245,500
235U 7.04 × 108
236U 2.342 × 107
237U 6.75 days
238U 4.468 × 109
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Adam Augustyn.