Dictionary Definition
thorium n : a soft silvery-white tetravalent
radioactive metallic element; isotope 232 is used as a power source
in nuclear reactors; occurs in thorite and in monazite sands [syn:
Th, atomic
number 90]
User Contributed Dictionary
Synonyms
- thorinum (former alternative form; obsolete)
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
- Afrikaans: torium
- Albanian: torium
- Arabic: (θóryum)
- Armenian: թորիում (t‘orium)
- Basque: torioa
- Belarusian: торый (tóryj)
- Bosnian: torij
- Breton: toriom
- Bulgarian: торий (tórij)
- Catalan: tori
- Chinese: 釷 / 钍 (tǔ)
- Cornish: thoryum
- Croatian: torij
- Czech: thorium
- Danish: thorium
- Dutch: thorium
- Esperanto: torio
- Estonian: toorium
- Faroese: thorium
- Finnish: torium
- French: thorium
- West Frisian: thorium
- Friulian: tori
- Gallegan: torio
- Georgian: თორიუმი (toriumi)
- German: Thorium
- Greek, Modern: θόριο (thório)
- Hebrew: תוריום (tóryum)
- Hungarian: tórium
- Icelandic: þórín
- Irish: tóiriam
- Italian: torio
- Japanese: トリウム (toriumu)
- Kashmiri: tor
- Kazakh: торий (torii)
- Korean: 토륨 (toryum)
- Latin: thorium
- Latvian: torijs
- Lithuanian: toris
- Luxembourgish: thorium
- Macedonian: ториум (tórium)
- Malay: torium
- Maltese: torjum
- Manx: thorium
- Mongolian: тори (tori)
- Norwegian: thorium
- Polish: tor
- Portuguese: tório
- Romanian: toriu
- Russian: торий (tórij)
- Scottish Gaelic: tòiriam
- Serbian: ториjум (torijum)
- Slovak: thorium
- Slovenian: torij
- Spanish: torio
- Swedish: torium
- Tajik: tori'
- Tamil: தோரியம் (tōriyam)
- Thai: (thoriam)
- Turkish: toryum
- Ukrainian: торiй (tórij)
- Uzbek: торий (toriy)
- Vietnamese: thori
- Welsh: thoriwm
External links
For etymology and more information refer to: http://elements.vanderkrogt.net/elem/th.html (A lot of the translations were taken from that site with permission from the author)Extensive Definition
Thorium () is a chemical
element with the symbol Th and atomic
number 90. As a naturally occurring, slightly radioactive
metal, it has been considered as an alternative nuclear fuel to
uranium.
Notable characteristics
When pure, thorium is a silvery white metal that retains its luster for several months. However, when it is exposed to oxygen, thorium slowly tarnishes in air, becoming grey and eventually black. Thorium dioxide (ThO2), also called thoria, has the highest melting point of any oxide (3300°C). When heated in air, thorium metal turnings ignite and burn brilliantly with a white light.Thorium has the largest liquid range of any
element: 2946 K between the melting point and boiling point.
See
Actinides in the environment for details of the environmental
aspects of thorium.
Applications
Applications of thorium:- As an alloying element in magnesium, used in aircraft engines, imparting high strength and creep resistance at elevated temperatures.
- Thorium is used to coat tungsten wire used in electronic equipment, improving the electron emission of heated cathodes.
- Uranium-thorium age dating has been used to date hominid fossils.
- As a fertile material for producing nuclear fuel. In particular, the proposed energy amplifier reactor design would employ thorium. Since thorium is more abundant than uranium, some nuclear reactor designs incorporate thorium in their fuel cycle.
- Thorium is a very effective radiation shield, although it has not been used for this purpose as much as lead or depleted uranium.
- Thorium may be used in nuclear reactors instead of uranium as fuel. This produces less transuranic waste.
Applications of thorium
dioxide (ThO2):
- Mantles in portable gas lights. These mantles glow with a dazzling light (unrelated to radioactivity) when heated in a gas flame.
- Used in gas tungsten arc welding electrodes.
- Used to control the grain size of tungsten used for electric lamps.
- Used in heat-resistant ceramics like high-temperature laboratory crucibles.
- Added to glass, it helps create glasses of a high refractive index and with low dispersion. Consequently, they find application in high-quality lenses for cameras and scientific instruments.
- Has been used as a catalyst:
- In the conversion of ammonia to nitric acid.
- In petroleum cracking.
- In producing sulfuric acid.
- Thorium dioxide is the active ingredient of Thorotrast, which was used as part of X-ray diagnostics. This use has been abandoned due to the carcinogenic nature of Thorotrast.
History
M. T. Esmark found a black mineral on Løvøy Island, Norway and gave a sample to Professor Jens Esmark, a noted mineralogist who was not able to identify it so he sent a sample to the Swedish chemist Jöns Jakob Berzelius for examination in 1828. Berzelius analysed it and named it after Thor, the Norse god of thunder. The metal had virtually no uses until the invention of the gas mantle in 1885.Between 1900 and 1903 Ernest
Rutherford and Frederick
Soddy showed how thorium decayed at a fixed rate over time into
a series of other elements. This observation led to the
identification of half life as
one of the outcomes of the alpha
particle experiments that led to their disintegration theory of
radioactivity.
The crystal
bar process (or Iodide process) was discovered by Anton
Eduard van Arkel and Jan
Hendrik de Boer in 1925 to produce high-purity metallic
thorium.
The name ionium was given early in the study of
radioactive elements to the 230Th isotope produced in the decay chain
of 238U
before it was realized that ionium and thorium were chemically
identical. The symbol Io was used for this supposed element.
Occurrence
Thorium is found in small amounts in most rocks and soils, where it is about three times more abundant than uranium, and is about as common as lead. Soil commonly contains an average of around 12 parts per million (ppm) of thorium. Thorium occurs in several minerals, the most common being the rare-earth thorium-phosphate mineral monazite, which contains up to about 12% thorium oxide. There are substantial deposits in several countries. 232Th decays very slowly (its half-life is about three times the age of the earth) but other thorium isotopes occur in the thorium and uranium decay chains. Most of these are short-lived and hence much more radioactive than 232Th, though on a mass basis they are negligible. India is believed to have 25% of the world's thorium reserves.See also thorium
minerals.
Distribution
Present knowledge of the distribution of thorium resources is poor because of the relatively low-key exploration efforts arising out of insignificant demand. Under the prevailing estimate, Australia and India have particularly large reserves of thorium.- The prevailing estimate of the economically available thorium reserves comes from the US Geological Survey, Mineral Commodity Summaries (1997-2006):
- Another estimate of Reasonably Assured Reserves (RAR) and Estimated Additional Reserves (EAR) of thorium comes from OECD/NEA, Nuclear Energy, "Trends in Nuclear Fuel Cycle", Paris, France (2001).
Thorium as a nuclear fuel
Thorium, as well as uranium and plutonium, can be used as fuel in a nuclear reactor. Although not fissile itself, 232Th will absorb slow neutrons to produce (233U), which is fissile. Hence, like 238U, it is fertile. In one significant respect 233U is better than the other two fissile isotopes used for nuclear fuel, 235U and plutonium-239 (239Pu), because of its higher neutron yield per neutron absorbed. Given a start with some other fissile material (235U or 239Pu), a breeding cycle similar to, but more efficient than that currently possible with the 238U-to-239Pu cycle (in slow-neutron reactors), can be set up. The 232Th absorbs a neutron to become 233Th which normally emits an electron and an anti-neutrino (\bar_e) by β− decay to become protactinium-233 (233Pa) and then emits another electron and anti-neutrino by a second β− decay to become 233U:- \mathrm\hbox+\rightarrow\mathrm\rightarrow\mathrm+ e^- + \bar_e
- \mathrm\rightarrow\mathrm+ e^- + \bar_e
The irradiated fuel can then be unloaded from the
reactor, the 233U separated from the thorium (a relatively simple
process since it involves chemical instead of isotopic
separation), and fed back into another reactor as part of a
closed nuclear
fuel cycle.
Problems include the high cost of fuel
fabrication due partly to the high radioactivity of 233U which is a
result of its contamination with traces of the short-lived 232U;
the similar problems in recycling thorium due to highly radioactive
228Th; some weapons proliferation risk of 233U; and the technical
problems (not yet satisfactorily solved) in reprocessing. Much
development work is still required before the thorium fuel cycle
can be commercialised, and the effort required seems unlikely while
(or where) abundant uranium is available.
Nevertheless, the
thorium fuel cycle, with its potential for breeding fuel
without fast
neutron reactors, holds considerable potential long-term
benefits. Thorium is significantly more abundant than uranium, and
is a key factor in sustainable nuclear energy.
One of the earliest efforts to use a thorium fuel
cycle took place at
Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the 1960s. An experimental
reactor was built based on Molten
Salt Reactor technology to study the feasibility of such an
approach, using thorium-fluoride salt
kept hot enough to be liquid, thus eliminating the need for
fabricating fuel elements. This effort culminated in the
Molten-Salt Reactor Experiment that used 232Th as the fertile
material and 233U as the fissile fuel. Due to a lack of funding,
the MSR program was discontinued in 1976.
In 2007, Norway was debating
whether or not to focus on thorium plants, due to the existence of
large deposits of thorium ores in the country, particularly at
Fensfeltet, near
Ulefoss in Telemark
county.
Isotopes
Naturally occurring thorium is composed of one isotope: 232Th. Twenty-seven radioisotopes have been characterized, with the most abundant and/or stable being 232Th with a half-life of 14.05 billion years, 230Th with a half-life of 75,380 years, 229Th with a half-life of 7340 years, and 228Th with a half-life of 1.92 years. All of the remaining radioactive isotopes have half-lives that are less than thirty days and the majority of these have half-lives that are less than ten minutes. One isotope, 229Th, has a nuclear isomer (or metastable state) with a remarkably low excitation energy of 3.5 eV.The known isotopes of thorium range in atomic
weight from 210 u
(210Th) to 236 u (236Th).
Precautions
Powdered thorium metal is often pyrophoric and should be handled carefully.Natural thorium decays very slowly compared to
many other radioactive materials, and the alpha
radiation emitted cannot penetrate human skin. Owning and
handling small amounts of thorium, such as a gas mantle, is
considered safe if care is taken not to ingest the thorium -- lungs
and other internal organs can be penetrated by alpha radiation.
Exposure to aerosolized thorium can lead to increased risk of
cancers of the lung, pancreas and blood. Exposure to thorium
internally leads to increased risk of liver diseases. This element has
no known biological role. See also Thorotrast.
Thorium Extraction
Thorium has been extracted chiefly from monazite through a multi-stage process. In the first stage, the monazite sand is dissolved in an anorganic acid such as sulfuric acid (H2SO4). In the second, the Thorium is extracted into an organic phase containing an amine. Next it is separated or "stripped" using an anion such as nitrate, chloride, hydroxide, or carbonate, returning the thorium to an aqueous phase. Finally, the thorium is precipitated and collected.See also
- David Hahn, who produced small quantities of fissionable material in his backyard.
- Periodic table
- Nuclear reactor
- Decay chain
- Sylvania Electric Products explosion
Footnotes
References
- Los Alamos National Laboratory — Thorium
- WebElements.com — Thorium
- The Uranium Information Centre provided some of the original material in this article.
- European Nuclear Society — Natural Decay Chains
External links
- Thorium information page
- New Age Nuclear: article on thorium reactors | Cosmos Magazine
- ATSDR ToxFAQs — Thorium
- USGS data — Thorium
- The Endless Refrigerator/Freezer Deodorizer, a commercial product which claimed to destroy odours 'forever.' Made with thorium-232.
- Is thorium the answer to our energy crisis?
- Thorium Energy Blog, discussion forum and document repository
- Another thorium information page
thorium in Arabic: ثوريوم
thorium in Bengali: থোরিয়াম
thorium in Belarusian: Торый
thorium in Bosnian: Torijum
thorium in Bulgarian: Торий
thorium in Catalan: Tori
thorium in Czech: Thorium
thorium in Corsican: Toriu
thorium in Danish: Thorium
thorium in German: Thorium
thorium in Estonian: Toorium
thorium in Modern Greek (1453-): Θόριο
thorium in Spanish: Torio
thorium in Esperanto: Torio
thorium in Basque: Torio
thorium in Persian: توریوم
thorium in French: Thorium
thorium in Friulian: Tori
thorium in Manx: Thorium
thorium in Galician: Torio
thorium in Korean: 토륨
thorium in Armenian: Թորիում
thorium in Hindi: थोरियम
thorium in Croatian: Torij
thorium in Ido: Torio
thorium in Indonesian: Torium
thorium in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Thorium
thorium in Italian: Torio
thorium in Hebrew: תוריום
thorium in Haitian: Toryòm
thorium in Latin: Thorium
thorium in Latvian: Torijs
thorium in Luxembourgish: Thorium
thorium in Lithuanian: Toris
thorium in Lojban: lidycevjinme
thorium in Hungarian: Tórium
thorium in Malayalam: തോറിയം
thorium in Dutch: Thorium
thorium in Japanese: トリウム
thorium in Norwegian: Thorium
thorium in Norwegian Nynorsk: Thorium
thorium in Polish: Tor (pierwiastek)
thorium in Portuguese: Tório
thorium in Romanian: Toriu
thorium in Quechua: Thoryu
thorium in Russian: Торий
thorium in Sicilian: Toriu
thorium in Simple English: Thorium
thorium in Slovak: Tórium
thorium in Slovenian: Torij
thorium in Serbian: Торијум
thorium in Serbo-Croatian: Torijum
thorium in Finnish: Torium
thorium in Swedish: Torium
thorium in Thai: ทอเรียม
thorium in Turkish: Toryum
thorium in Ukrainian: Торій
thorium in Chinese: 钍