Rf 104

Rutherfordium (Rf)

transition-metal
Period: 7 Group: 4 Block: s

Solid

Standard Atomic Weight

[263]

Electron configuration

[Rn] 7s2 5f14 6d2

Melting point

2126.85 °C (2400 K)

Boiling point

5526.85 °C (5800 K)

Density

2.330000e+4 kg/m³

Oxidation states

+3, +4

Electronegativity (Pauling)

N/A

Ionization energy (1st)

Discovery year

1964

Atomic radius

150 pm

Details

Name origin Named in honor of Ernest Rutherford
Discovery country United States
Discoverers A. Ghiorso, et al

Rutherfordium is a synthetic transactinide element and the first member of the 6d transition-metal series. All confirmed isotopes are radioactive and short-lived, so its chemistry is studied atom by atom. Chemical experiments show behavior broadly consistent with a group 4 element, analogous to hafnium and zirconium, with the +4 oxidation state dominant in aqueous and halide systems. Relativistic effects and nuclear instability make direct measurements difficult.

Rutherfordium does not occur naturally in the Earth’s crust. Credit for the first synthesis of this element is given jointly to Albert Ghiorso and his team at the University of California in Berkeley and Georgi Flerov and his team at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna, Russia. The element is named for Ernest Rutherford (Fig. IUPAC.104.1), who won the Nobel Prize for developing the theory of radioactive transformations [645].

Rutherfordium is of interest in particle physics research, but it has no commercial applications. 261Rf was one of the decay products used to confirm the synthesis of copernicium in a particle accelerator experiment [634].

Rutherfordium named after Ernest Rutherford.

Scientists working at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, first reported the production of rutherfordium in 1964. They bombarded atoms of plutonium-242 with ions of neon-22, forming what they believed to be atoms of rutherfordium-260 and four free neutrons. In 1969, a group of scientists working at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, now known as the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, in Berkeley, California, attempted to confirm the Dubna group's discovery. Lacking the equipment needed to accelerate neon ions, the Berkeley group, led by Albert Ghiorso, bombarded atoms of californium-248 and californium-249 with ions of carbon-12 and carbon-13, producing atoms of rutherfordium-257, rutherfordium-258, rutherfordium-259 and rutherfordium-261. They were, however, unable to produce the same isotope as the Dubna group. Credit for the discovery of rutherfordium is still under debate. Rutherfordium's most stable isotope, rutherfordium-263, has a half-life of about 10 minutes and decays through spontaneous fission.

In 1964, workers at the Joint Nuclear Research Institute at Dubna (U.S.S.R.) bombarded plutonium with accelerated 113 to 115 MeV neon ions. By measuring fission tracks in a special glass with a microscope, they detected an isotope that decays by spontaneous fission. They suggested that this isotope, which had a half-life of 0.3 +/- 0.1 s might be 260-104, produced by the following reaction: 242Pu + 22Ne >260Rf +4n.

Element 104, the first transactinide element, is expected to have chemical properties similar to those of hafnium. It would, for example, form a relatively volatile compound with chlorine (a tetrachloride).

The Soviet scientists have performed experiments aimed at chemical identification, and have attempted to show that the 0.3-s activity is more volatile than that of the relatively nonvolatile actinide trichlorides. This experiment does not fulfill the test of chemically separating the new element from all others, but it provides important evidence for evaluation. Data issued by Soviet scientists reduced the half-life of the isotope they worked with from 0.3 to 0.15 s.

Images

Properties

Physical

Atomic radius (empirical) 150 pm
Density
Phase at STP solid
Melting point 2126.85 °C
Boiling point 5526.85 °C

Chemical

Electron affinity
Ionization energy (1st)
Ionization energy (2nd)
Ionization energy (3rd)
Ionization energy (4th)
Ionization energy (5th)
Oxidation states +3, +4
Valence electrons 4
Electron configuration
Electron configuration (semantic)

Thermodynamic

N/A

Nuclear

Stable isotopes 0
Mass number (most stable) 263
Discovery year 1964

Abundance

N/A

Reactivity

N/A

Crystal Structure

N/A

Electronic Structure

Electrons per shell 2, 8, 18, 32, 32, 10, 2

Identifiers

CAS number 53850-36-5
Term symbol
InChI InChI=1S/Rf
InChI Key YGPLJIIQQIDVFJ-UHFFFAOYSA-N

Electron Configuration Predicted

Ion charge
Protons 104
Electrons 104
Charge Neutral
Configuration Rf: 5f¹⁴ 6d² 7s²
Electron configuration
Predicted
[Rn] 5f¹⁴ 6d² 7s²
1s² 2s² 2p⁶ 3s² 3p⁶ 3d¹⁰ 4s² 4p⁶ 4d¹⁰ 5s² 5p⁶ 4f¹⁴ 5d¹⁰ 6s² 6p⁶ 5f¹⁴ 6d² 7s²
Orbital diagram
1s
2/2
2s
2/2
2p
6/6
3s
2/2
3p
6/6
4s
2/2
3d
10/10
4p
6/6
5s
2/2
4d
10/10
5p
6/6
6s
2/2
4f
14/14
5d
10/10
6p
6/6
7s
2/2
5f
14/14
6d
2/10 2↑
Total electrons: 104 Unpaired: 2 ?

Atomic model

Protons 104
Neutrons 154
Electrons 104
Mass number 258
Stability Radioactive

Isotopes change neutron count, mass, and stability — not the electron configuration of a neutral atom.

Schematic atomic model, not to scale.

Atomic Fingerprint

Emission / Absorption Spectrum

0 / 0 (0 with intensity)
Measured
Emission Visible: 380–750 nm

Isotope Distribution

No stable isotopes.

Mass numberAtomic mass (u)Natural abundanceHalf-life
262 Radioactive262.10992 ± 0.00024N/A250 ms
254 Radioactive254.10005 ± 0.0003N/A22.9 us
260 Radioactive260.10644 ± 0.00022N/A21 ms
253 Radioactive253.10044 ± 0.00044N/A13 ms
258 Radioactive258.103428 ± 0.000034N/A12.5 ms
Measured

Phase / State

1 atm / 101.325 kPa Predicted
Solid 25 °C (298.15 K)

Reason: 2101.8 °C below melting point (2126.85 °C)

Melting point 2126.85 °C
Boiling point 5526.85 °C
Below melting by 2101.8 °C
0 K Current temperature: 25 °C 6000 K
Phase timeline

Schematic, not to scale

Solid
Liquid
Gas
Melting
Boiling
25°C
Solid
Liquid
Gas
Current

Phase transition points

Melting point Predicted
2126.85 °C
Boiling point Predicted
5526.85 °C
Current phase Predicted
Solid

Density

Reference density Predicted
2.330000e+4 kg/m³

At standard conditions

Current density Predicted
2.330000e+4 kg/m³

At standard conditions

Atomic Spectra

Showing 10 of 93 Atomic Spectra. Sorted by ion charge (ascending).

Levels Holdings ?

IonChargeLevels
Rf I 02
Rf II +12
Rf III +22
Rf IV +32
Rf V +42
Rf VI +52
Rf VII +62
Rf VIII +72
Rf IX +82
Rf X +92
NIST Levels Holdings →
104 Rf 263

Rutherfordium — Atomic Orbital Visualizer

[Rn]7s25f146d2
Energy levels 2 8 18 32 32 10 2
Oxidation states +3, +4
HOMO 6d n=6 · l=2 · m=-2
Rutherfordium — Atomic Orbital Visualizer Preview
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104 Rf 263

Rutherfordium — Crystal Structure Visualizer

Crystal structure data not available

Compounds

Rf
267.122 u

Isotopes (5)

In 1969 Ghiorso, Nurmia, Harris, K.A.Y. Eskola, and P.L. Eskola of the University of California at Berkeley reported that they had positively identified two, and possibly three isotopes of Element 104. The group indicated that, after repeated attempts, they produced isotope 260104 reported by the Dubna groups in 1964.

Mass numberAtomic mass (u)Natural abundanceHalf-lifeDecay mode
262 Radioactive262.10992 ± 0.00024N/A250 ms
SF ≈100%
254 Radioactive254.10005 ± 0.0003N/A22.9 us
SF ≈100%α<1.5%
260 Radioactive260.10644 ± 0.00022N/A21 ms
SF ≈100%α ?β+ ?
253 Radioactive253.10044 ± 0.00044N/A13 ms
SF ≈100%α ?
258 Radioactive258.103428 ± 0.000034N/A12.5 ms
SF =95.1±1.6%α =4.9±1.6%
262 Radioactive
Atomic mass (u) 262.10992 ± 0.00024
Natural abundance N/A
Half-life 250 ms
Decay mode
SF ≈100%
254 Radioactive
Atomic mass (u) 254.10005 ± 0.0003
Natural abundance N/A
Half-life 22.9 us
Decay mode
SF ≈100%α<1.5%
260 Radioactive
Atomic mass (u) 260.10644 ± 0.00022
Natural abundance N/A
Half-life 21 ms
Decay mode
SF ≈100%α ? +1
253 Radioactive
Atomic mass (u) 253.10044 ± 0.00044
Natural abundance N/A
Half-life 13 ms
Decay mode
SF ≈100%α ?
258 Radioactive
Atomic mass (u) 258.103428 ± 0.000034
Natural abundance N/A
Half-life 12.5 ms
Decay mode
SF =95.1±1.6%α =4.9±1.6%

Extended Properties

Covalent Radii (Extended)

Covalent radius (Pyykkö)  
Covalent radius (Pyykkö, double)  
Covalent radius (Pyykkö, triple)  

Numbering Scales

Mendeleev

Polarizability & Dispersion

Dipole polarizability  
Dipole polarizability (unc.)  

Oxidation State Categories

+3 extended
+4 main

Advanced Reference Data

Isotope Decay Modes (33)
IsotopeModeIntensity
253SF100%
253A
254SF100%
254A1.5%
255A52.8%
255SF47.2%
255B+6%
256SF99.7%
256A0.3%
257A89.3%

Additional Data

References

(8)
2 Atomic Mass Data Center (AMDC), International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Rf

The half-life and atomic mass data was provided by the Atomic Mass Data Center at the International Atomic Energy Agency.

3 IUPAC Commission on Isotopic Abundances and Atomic Weights (CIAAW)
Rutherfordium

Element data are cited from the Atomic weights of the elements (an IUPAC Technical Report). The IUPAC periodic table of elements can be found at https://iupac.org/what-we-do/periodic-table-of-elements/. Additional information can be found within IUPAC publication doi:10.1515/pac-2015-0703 Copyright © 2020 International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.

4 IUPAC Periodic Table of the Elements and Isotopes (IPTEI)

The information are cited from Pure Appl. Chem. 2018; 90(12): 1833-2092, https://doi.org/10.1515/pac-2015-0703.

License note: Copyright (c) 2020 International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) contribution within Pubchem is provided under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license, unless otherwise stated.
5 Jefferson Lab, U.S. Department of Energy
Rutherfordium

Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (Jefferson Lab) is one of 17 national laboratories funded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The lab's primary mission is to conduct basic research of the atom's nucleus using the lab's unique particle accelerator, known as the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF). For more information visit https://www.jlab.org/

License note: Please see citation and linking information: https://education.jlab.org/faq/index.html
6 Los Alamos National Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy
Rutherfordium

The periodic table at the LANL (Los Alamos National Laboratory) contains basic element information together with the history, source, properties, use, handling and more. The provenance data may be found from the link under the source name.

7 NIST Physical Measurement Laboratory
Rutherfordium

The periodic table contains NIST's critically-evaluated data on atomic properties of the elements. The provenance data that include data for atomic spectroscopy, X-ray and gamma ray, radiation dosimetry, nuclear physics, and condensed matter physics may be found from the link under the source name. Ref: https://www.nist.gov/pml/atomic-spectra-database

8 PubChem Elements
Rutherfordium

This section provides all form of data related to element Rutherfordium.

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