Uranium was discovered in the 1700's in the coal mines of bohemia and Jachlovikna.
Uranium's atomic number is 92, its Symbol is U and the atomic mass of uranium is
238.0289. Miners called it Pechblende meaning, Pechblende, from the German words pech,
which means either pitch or bad luck, and blende, meaning mineral
Uranium's first full analysis was done on 1789 by Martin Klaproth, a self-taught well
educated german chemist.
Klaproth, having extracted from pitchblende what he called 'a strange kind of half metal'
(he had only isolated its oxide), he resisted the temptation to give his own name to the
new element, which was quite customary at the time.
William Herschel gave uranium its name from the last planet founded in are solar system
at the time, he named it Uran, which in its final form became uranium, a name which today
is known worldwide while klaproth's own fame has faded.
Uranium is as dense as gold. Uranium, was first prepared with some difficulty, in 1841 by
the french chemist Eugene Peligot, using thermal reaction of tetrachloride with
potassium. Later in 1870, an important fact was established: uranium is the last and
heaviest element present on earth. This was demonstrated by Dimitri Mendeleev in his
famous perodical classification of the elements by chemical properties and increasing
atomic mass.
Experimentation with uranium lead to many discoversies such as the X-ray by
Wilhelm Rontgen, on November 8, 1895.
Wilhelm Rontgen, was awarded the first Nobel prize in 1901 for the development of the
X-ray.
Uranium is weakly radioactive, decaying slowly but inexorably at the rate of one
milligram per tonne per year. It is transformed into inactive lead through a chain of
radioelements or daughters, each of which has a characteristic disintegration rate, a
constant of nature that man has never been able to alter. The proportion of each
radioelement in the ore is inversely proportional to its rate of disintegration. Radium
is the fifth radioactive descendant in the chain from uranium to lead, its daughter is
the gas radon, and polonium is the last radioelement before lead.
The discovery of Uranium changed the world as we knew it, from its physical and chemical
properties we came about the X-ray, following down the line, chemists and scientists used
Uranium to make weapons of mass destruction, (i.e the Atom bomb).
--
Refrence's
1. Comptons Online Encyclopedia
2. Websters Dictionary
3. Merill, Physical Science book
|