Uranium
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Uranium is a chemical element with the symbol U and atomic number 92. It is a silvery-grey metal in the actinide series of the periodic table. Uranium radioactively decays, which means it slowly changes over time and releases energy. This helps scientists learn about the age of the Earth.
Uranium has many important uses. It is used in nuclear power plants to make electricity. One of its types, called uranium-235, can split easily and release a lot of energy. However, uranium needs special treatment before it can be used.
Uranium was first found in 1789 by a scientist named Martin Heinrich Klaproth. He named it after the planet Uranus. Later, scientists found that uranium could be used in powerful nuclear reactions. Today, we work to safely handle materials from old nuclear weapons.
Characteristics
Uranium is a shiny, white metal that gives off a little bit of radiation. It is strong enough to scratch glass and is similar in hardness to metals like titanium. Uranium is soft and can be shaped, and it is not a great conductor of electricity. It is very heavy, heavier than lead but not as heavy as gold.
Uranium can react with many elements and compounds, especially when it gets hotter. Special types of acids can dissolve uranium. Tiny pieces of uranium can even react with cold water. In 1938, scientists discovered that uranium can split into smaller pieces when hit with tiny particles called neutrons. This splitting can create a lot of energy and more neutrons. If too many neutrons hit more uranium, it can cause a big chain reaction, like in a nuclear reactor or bomb.
Applications
Military
The main use of uranium in the military is in special ammunition that can break through very strong armor. This ammunition is made from a special type of uranium mixed with a tiny amount of other metals. It is very heavy and hard, which helps it destroy enemy tanks and vehicles. This same special uranium is also used to make armor stronger.
Uranium has also been used to make nuclear weapons. During World War II and the Cold War, a special kind of uranium was used to create powerful explosions.
Civilian
Mostly, uranium is used to make electricity in nuclear power plants. A small amount of uranium can produce a huge amount of energy.
Before people knew about radioactivity, uranium was used to color glass and pottery. It was also used in old photography, lighting, and even to help make teeth look better. Scientists also use uranium to figure out how old very old rocks are.
History
Pre-discovery use
People have used a natural form of uranium, called pitchblende, for a very long time. As far back as 79 AD, during the time of the Roman Empire, pitchblende was used to give a yellow color to ceramic glazes. Later, during the Middle Ages, it was taken from silver mines in Joachimsthal, Bohemia (now Jáchymov in the Czech Republic), and used to color glass.
Discovery
The element uranium was discovered by a German chemist named Martin Heinrich Klaproth in 1789. He was working in Berlin and found a yellow substance in pitchblende. He thought it was a new element and named it "Uranium" after the planet Uranus, which had been discovered eight years earlier.
In 1896, a scientist named Henri Becquerel discovered that uranium could emit invisible rays that could affect photographic plates. This was the first discovery of radioactivity.
Fission research
In 1934, a team led by Enrico Fermi found that when uranium is bombarded with neutrons, it can break apart in a process called nuclear fission. This discovery led to the development of nuclear power and nuclear weapons.
Nuclear weaponry
During World War II, the United States developed two types of atomic bombs. One used uranium, and the other used plutonium made from uranium. The uranium bomb was used over Hiroshima, Japan, in 1945.
Reactors
The first reactor designed to run continuously was built in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Another reactor in Idaho was the first to produce electricity. The world’s first commercial nuclear power plant began operating in the Soviet Union in 1954.
Prehistoric naturally occurring fission
In 1972, scientists found evidence of natural nuclear reactors that operated over a billion years ago in Gabon, Africa. These reactors worked because there was more uranium-235 available at that time.
Contamination and the Cold War legacy
Above-ground nuclear tests in the 1950s and 1960s spread radioactive materials around the world. Uranium miners have faced health risks. During the Cold War, large amounts of uranium were stored, and there were concerns about security and safety. Efforts have been made to improve safety and secure nuclear materials.
Occurrence
Uranium is a natural element found in small amounts in rocks, soil, and water all around Earth. It is the heaviest element commonly found in nature and is usually combined with other elements. Uranium is about the 48th most common element in the Earth's crust.
Uranium is not very plentiful, but it is more common than metals like silver, tin, or mercury. It is found in many minerals, and some places have lots of it, like certain types of rock and sand. Scientists think that most of Earth's heat comes from the slow breaking down of uranium and other elements deep inside the planet.
Compounds
Oxidation states and oxides
See also: Uranium oxide
Triuranium octoxide and uranium dioxide are the two most common uranium oxides.
Uranium can be in different forms called oxidation states. The two most important are uranium(IV) and uranium(VI). These form two oxides: uranium dioxide (UO2) and uranium trioxide (UO3).
The most common forms of uranium oxide are triuranium octoxide (U3O8) and UO2. Both are solids that don’t dissolve easily in water. Triuranium octoxide is the most stable form of uranium and is often found in nature. Uranium dioxide is used as fuel in nuclear reactors. Over time, UO2 changes into U3O8.
Aqueous chemistry
Many uranium salts can dissolve in water. Common forms include U3+ (brown-red), U4+ (green), and UO2+2 (yellow). The UO2+2 ion forms compounds like uranyl carbonate, uranyl chloride, and uranyl sulfate.
Unlike uranyl salts, uranates usually don’t dissolve in water.
Carbonates
When carbonate is added to uranium(VI) solutions, it changes how uranium behaves. Uranium carbonates often dissolve in water because uranium can bind with carbonates.
Effects of pH
The way uranium behaves changes with the pH of the solution. Adding carbonate changes uranium into carbonate complexes, which can dissolve better in water.
Hydrides, carbides and nitrides
Uranium metal reacts with hydrogen when heated to form uranium hydride. Uranium hydrides have two forms.
Uranium carbides and uranium nitrides are special compounds that don’t dissolve in acids or react with water.
Halides
All uranium fluorides are made using uranium tetrafluoride (UF4). UF4 is made by adding hydrofluoric acid to uranium dioxide.
At room temperature, UF6 easily turns into a vapor, which is useful for separating uranium-235 from uranium-238.
Uranium tetrachloride (UCl4) is made by combining chlorine with uranium metal. All uranium chlorides react with water and air.
Bromides and iodides of uranium are made by reacting bromine and iodine with uranium.
| Uranium in a non-complexing aqueous medium (e.g. perchloric acid/sodium hydroxide). | Uranium in carbonate solution |
| Relative concentrations of the different chemical forms of uranium in a non-complexing aqueous medium (e.g. perchloric acid/sodium hydroxide). | Relative concentrations of the different chemical forms of uranium in an aqueous carbonate solution. |
Isotopes
Main article: Isotopes of uranium
Uranium, like all elements with more than 82 protons, does not have stable isotopes. All of its isotopes are radioactive. However, two isotopes, 238U and 235U, have very long lifetimes and can still be found in nature.
Natural uranium consists mainly of three isotopes: uranium-238 (about 99.28%), uranium-235 (about 0.71%), and a very small amount of uranium-234 (about 0.0054%). There are also a few other rare isotopes of uranium.
Uranium-238 is the most stable isotope, with a very long lifetime. It decays into thorium-234 and eventually into lead-206. Uranium-235 has a shorter lifetime than uranium-238 but is still very long. It is important for nuclear reactors and weapons. Uranium-234 is part of the same decay series as uranium-238 and also decays into lead-206.
Other isotopes of uranium, like uranium-236 and uranium-233, are produced in nuclear reactors and have shorter lifetimes. Some of these isotopes can also be used as nuclear fuel.
Human exposure
People can come into contact with uranium or its radioactive daughters, like radon, by breathing in dust or eating food and drinking water that contain it. Usually, there is only a tiny amount of uranium in the air, but people may be exposed to more if they work in factories that process phosphate fertilizers with uranium, live near places that make or test nuclear weapons, or are near battlefields where special weapons have been used. Living near coal-fired power plants, uranium mines, or uranium processing facilities can also increase exposure.
The health effects of uranium come mainly from its toxicity, not from radiation. Special groups, like the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, have set limits on how much uranium workers can be around in a day. Most uranium that is eaten passes through the body, but some can stay in the body for many years, especially in bone tissue. Uranium does not go through the skin, and the small particles it gives off cannot pass through skin either.
Effects and precautions
Uranium can affect the kidney, brain, liver, heart, and other parts of the body because it is a toxic metal. While it gives off a type of radiation that cannot go through skin, inhaling uranium can be harmful. Special care is taken when handling uranium to protect people from breathing it in or swallowing it.
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