Mineral Chemistry

Protactinium (Pa)

Advertisment
WE BUY COLLECTIONS & SINGLE IMPORTANT SPECIMENS
Atomic Mass 231.03588
Atomic Number 91
Name Origins Greek, protos = "first."
Year Discovered 1917
Discovery Credits Discovered by Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner at Berlin, by K. Fajans at Karlsruhe, Germany, and by F. Soddy, J. A. Cranston, and A. Fleck at Glasgow, Scotland.
Remarks Radioactive, silvery metal found naturally in uranium ores. Attacked by oxygen, steam, and acids, but not by alkalis. Little used. Primarily occurs as a trace amount (a few ppm) in uranium minerals where it is a decay product of uranium
References Emsley, J., 1991; THE ELEMENTS : Sec. Ed., Clarendon Press, Oxford, 251 p.
See Also WebElements, ChemiCool
Naturally Occurring Isotopes
Symbol Isotope Mass Isotope Nuclide Number Isotope Number Natural Abundance Half-life Half-life Units Decay Mode Decay Mode MeV Decay Mode %
Pa 231.03588 231 91 Trace 32700 Years alpha 5.148 100.0%

There are no Minerals containing Pa ( Protactinium )


Go To Webmineral Home Crystallography X-Ray D-Spacing Table Chemical Composition
Dana Classification Strunz Classification Table of Mineral Properties Alphabetical Listing of Minerals
Search Webmineral Photo Gallery of Mineral Images Help Files Links