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Isotopes of europium

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Isotopes of europium (63Eu)
Main isotopes[1]Decay
abun­dancehalf-life (t1/2)modepro­duct
150Eusynth36.9 yβ+150Sm
151Eu47.8%4.62×1018 yα147Pm
152Eusynth13.54 yε152Sm
β152Gd
153Eu52.2%stable
154Eusynth8.59 yβ154Gd
155Eusynth4.76 yβ155Gd
Standard atomic weight Ar°(Eu)

Naturally occurring europium (63Eu) is composed of two isotopes, 151Eu and 153Eu, with 153Eu being the most abundant (52.2% natural abundance). While 153Eu is observationally stable (theoretically can undergo alpha decay with half-life over 5.5×1017 years), 151Eu was found in 2007 to be unstable and undergo alpha decay.[4] The half-life is measured to be (4.62 ± 0.95(stat.) ± 0.68(syst.)) × 1018 years[5] which corresponds to 1 alpha decay per two minutes in every kilogram of natural europium. Besides the natural radioisotope 151Eu, 36 artificial radioisotopes have been characterized, with the most stable being 150Eu with a half-life of 36.9 years, 152Eu with a half-life of 13.516 years, 154Eu with a half-life of 8.593 years, and 155Eu with a half-life of 4.7612 years. The majority of the remaining radioactive isotopes, which range from 130Eu to 170Eu, have half-lives that are less than 12.2 seconds. This element also has 18 metastable isomers, with the most stable being 150mEu (t1/2 12.8 hours), 152m1Eu (t1/2 9.3116 hours) and 152m5Eu (t1/2 96 minutes).

The primary decay mode before the most abundant stable isotope, 153Eu, is electron capture, and the primary mode after is beta decay. The primary decay products before 153Eu are isotopes of samarium and the primary products after are isotopes of gadolinium.

List of isotopes


Nuclide
[n 1]
ZNIsotopic mass (Da)
[n 2][n 3]
Half-life
[n 4][n 5]
Decay
mode

[n 6]
Daughter
isotope

[n 7][n 8]
Spin and
parity
[n 9][n 5]
Natural abundance (mole fraction)
Excitation energy[n 5]Normal proportionRange of variation
130Eu6367129.96357(54)#1.1(5) ms
[0.9(+5−3) ms]
2+#
131Eu6368130.95775(43)#17.8(19) ms3/2+
132Eu6369131.95437(43)#100# msβ+132Sm
p131Sm
133Eu6370132.94924(32)#200# msβ+133Sm11/2−#
134Eu6371133.94651(21)#0.5(2) sβ+134Sm
β+, p (rare)133Pm
135Eu6372134.94182(32)#1.5(2) sβ+135Sm11/2−#
β+, p134Pm
136Eu6373135.93960(21)#3.3(3) sβ+ (99.91%)136Sm(7+)
β+, p (.09%)135Pm
136mEu0(500)# keV3.8(3) sβ+ (99.91%)136Sm(3+)
β+, p (.09%)135Pm
137Eu6374136.93557(21)#8.4(5) sβ+137Sm11/2−#
138Eu6375137.93371(3)12.1(6) sβ+138Sm(6−)
139Eu6376138.929792(14)17.9(6) sβ+139Sm(11/2)−
140Eu6377139.92809(6)1.51(2) sβ+ (95.1(7)%)140Sm1+
EC (4.9(7)%)
140mEu210(15) keV125(2) msIT (99%)140Eu5−#
β+(1%)140Sm
141Eu6378140.924931(14)40.7(7) sβ+141Sm5/2+
141mEu96.45(7) keV2.7(3) sIT (86%)141Eu11/2−
β+ (14%)141Sm
142Eu6379141.92343(3)2.36(10) sβ+ (89.9(16)%)142Sm1+
EC (11.1(16)%)
142mEu460(30) keV1.223(8) minβ+142Sm8−
143Eu6380142.920298(12)2.59(2) minβ+143Sm5/2+
143mEu389.51(4) keV50.0(5) μs11/2−
144Eu6381143.918817(12)10.2(1) sβ+144Sm1+
144mEu1127.6(6) keV1.0(1) μs(8−)
145Eu6382144.916265(4)5.93(4) dβ+145Sm5/2+
145mEu716.0(3) keV490 ns11/2−
146Eu6383145.917206(7)4.61(3) dβ+146Sm4−
146mEu666.37(16) keV235(3) μs9+
147Eu6384146.916746(3)24.1(6) dβ+ (99.99%)147Sm5/2+
α (.0022%)143Pm
148Eu6385147.918086(11)54.5(5) dβ+ (100%)148Sm5−
α (9.39×10−7%)144Pm
149Eu6386148.917931(5)93.1(4) dEC149Sm5/2+
150Eu6387149.919702(7)36.9(9) yβ+150Sm5(−)
150mEu42.1(5) keV12.8(1) hβ (89%)150Gd0−
β+ (11%)150Sm
IT (5×10−8%)150Eu
151Eu[n 10]6388150.9198502(26)4.62×1018 yα147Pm5/2+0.4781(6)
151mEu196.245(10) keV58.9(5) μs11/2−
152Eu6389151.9217445(26)13.537(6) yEC (72.09%)152Sm3−
β (27.9%)152Gd
β+ (0.027%)152Sm
152m1Eu45.5998(4) keV9.3116(13) hβ (72%)152Gd0−
β+ (28%)152Sm
152m2Eu65.2969(4) keV0.94(8) μs1−
152m3Eu78.2331(4) keV165(10) ns1+
152m4Eu89.8496(4) keV384(10) ns4+
152m5Eu147.86(10) keV96(1) min8−
153Eu[n 11]6390152.9212303(26)Observationally Stable[n 12][6]5/2+0.5219(6)
154Eu[n 11]6391153.9229792(26)8.593(4) yβ (99.98%)154Gd3−
EC (.02%)154Sm
154m1Eu68.1702(4) keV2.2(1) μsIT154Eu2+
154m2Eu145.3(3) keV46.3(4) minIT154Eu(8−)
155Eu[n 11]6392154.9228933(27)4.7611(13) yβ155Gd5/2+
156Eu[n 11]6393155.924752(6)15.19(8) dβ156Gd0+
157Eu6394156.925424(6)15.18(3) hβ157Gd5/2+
158Eu6395157.92785(8)45.9(2) minβ158Gd(1−)
159Eu6396158.929089(8)18.1(1) minβ159Gd5/2+
160Eu6397159.93197(22)#38(4) sβ160Gd1(−)
161Eu6398160.93368(32)#26(3) sβ161Gd5/2+#
162Eu6399161.93704(32)#10.6(10) sβ162Gd
163Eu63100162.93921(54)#7.7(4) sβ163Gd5/2+#
163mEu964.5(10) keV911(24) ns(13/2−)
164Eu63101163.94299(64)#4.16(19) sβ164Gd
165Eu63102164.94572(75)#2.163+0.139
−0.120
 s
[7]
β165Gd5/2+#
166Eu63103165.94997(86)#1.277+0.100
−0.145
 s
[7]
β (99.37%)166Gd
β, n (0.63%)165Gd
167Eu63104166.95321(86)#852+76
−54
 s
[7]
β (98.05%)167Gd5/2+#
β, n (1.95%)166Gd
168Eu63105440+48
−47
 s
[7]
β (96.05%)168Gd
β, n (3.95%)167Gd
169Eu63106389+92
−88
 s
[7]
β (85.38%)169Gd
β, n (14.62%)168Gd
170Eu63107197+74
−71
 s
[7]
β170Gd
β, n169Gd
This table header & footer:

Europium-155

Medium-lived
fission products [further explanation needed]
t½
(year)
Yield
(%)
Q
(keV)
βγ
155Eu4.760.0803252βγ
85Kr10.760.2180687βγ
113mCd14.10.0008316β
90Sr28.94.505  2826β
137Cs30.236.337  1176βγ
121mSn43.90.00005390βγ
151Sm88.80.531477β

Europium-155 is a fission product with a half-life of 4.76 years. It has a maximum decay energy of 252 keV. In a thermal reactor (almost all current nuclear power plants), it has a low fission product yield, about half of one percent as much as the most abundant fission products.

155Eu's large neutron capture cross section (about 3900 barns for thermal neutrons, 16000 resonance integral) means that most of even the small amount produced is destroyed in the course of the nuclear fuel's burnup. Yield, decay energy, and half-life are all far less than that of 137Cs and 90Sr, so 155Eu is not a significant contributor to nuclear waste.

Some 155Eu is also produced by successive neutron capture on 153Eu (nonradioactive, 350 barns thermal, 1500 resonance integral, yield is about 5 times as great as 155Eu) and 154Eu (half-life 8.6 years, 1400 barns thermal, 1600 resonance integral, fission yield is extremely small because beta decay stops at 154Sm). However, the differing cross sections mean that both 155Eu and 154Eu are destroyed faster than they are produced.

154Eu is a prolific emitter of gamma radiation.[8]

IsotopeHalf-lifeRelative yieldThermal neutronResonance integral
Eu-153Stable53501500
Eu-1548.6 yearsNearly 015001600
Eu-1554.76 years1390016000

References

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