Isotopes and Allotropes – GKToday

Isotopes and Allotropes

Elements are pure chemical substances consisting of one type of atom. Elements can be metals, metalloids or non-metals. Examples: carbon, oxygen (non-metals), silicon, arsenic (metalloids), aluminium, iron, copper, gold, mercury, and lead (metals).

As of now, 118 elements have been defined of which 98 are known to occur naturally and 80 are stable. Others are either radioactive, decaying into lighter elements over various timescales from fractions of a second to billions of years or synthesized.

Most abundant elements

Hydrogen and helium are by far the most abundant elements in the universe. However, iron is the most abundant element (by mass) making up the Earth. Oxygen is the most common element in the Earth’s crust.

Isotopes

Isotopes have different number of neutrons but same number of protons. The number of protons is called atomic number so all isotopes have same atomic number but different number of nucleons (neutron + proton) due to different number of neutrons. For example C12, C13 & C14 are isotopes. Each of them has 6 protons. But they have 6, 7, 8 neutrons. So their atomic weights vary.  The 80 elements with stable isotopes have atomic number of 1 to 82.

The first synthetic element was technetium. Technetium is found in trace amounts in nature and was discovered in 1925 but it was synthesized in 1937.

Allotropes

Some chemical elements are known to exist in two or more different forms because the atoms are bounded together in different manners. Most common example is Carbon which exists in Diamond, graphite, fullerenes etc. Allotropy is for elements and NOT for compounds. For example water and ice are not allotropes. The changes in state between solid, gas and liquid is NOT allotropy.

Oxygen has two allotropes viz. Oxygen and Ozone. These allotropes can stay in all the liquid, gaseous and solid phases. Phosphorus has many allotropes but when melted, all return to the P4 form. The different structural forms of the same element lead to the allotropes to show different physical properties and chemical behaviours.

Some allotropes
Allotropes of Carbon:
Allotropes of Phosphorus
Allotropes of Oxygen
Allotropes of Nitrogen
Allotropes of Sulfur

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