The oganesson odyssey
in your element
The oganesson odyssey
Kit Chapman explores the voyage to the discovery of element 118, the pioneer chemist it is named after, and false
claims made along the way.
H
aving an element named after you
is incredibly rare. In fact, to be
honoured in this manner during
your lifetime has only happened to
two scientists — Glenn Seaborg and
Yuri Oganessian. Yet, on meeting Oganessian
it seems fitting. A colleague of his once
told me that when he first arrived in the
halls of Oganessian’s programme at the
Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR)
in Dubna, Russia, it was unlike anything
he’d ever experienced. Forget the 2,000 ton
magnets, the beam lines and the brand new
cyclotron being installed designed to hunt
for elements 119 and 120, the difference
was Oganessian: “When you come to work
for Yuri, it’s not like a lab,” he explained.
“It’s like a theatre — and he’s the director.”
For 60 years, with his very own blend
of creativity, scientific skill and leadership,
Oganessian has pushed the boundaries
of the periodic table. Born in Rostovon-Don of Armenian descent, the young
Oganessian wanted to be an architect
before he joined the Moscow Engineering
Physics Institute. There, he elected to
join the USSR’s element hunters under
Georgy Flerov. He went on to pioneer
the ‘cold fusion’ technique, which would
lead to elements 107–113, and the ‘hot
fusion’ reactions with the neutron-rich
48
Ca that would give the world flerovium
and beyond. A large part of modern
science is about partnerships; Oganessian
builds and cultivates them with warmth,
insight and insatiable scientific curiosity.
The element that bears his name,
oganesson, is similarly unique. It was first
produced in 2002, firing 48Ca at a 249Cf
target, by Oganessian’s team from JINR
and colleagues at the Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory, US1. There is currently
only one known isotope, 294Og, made in
reactions so rare that it took ten years to
obtain four confirmed atoms. The fourth
in particular was a lucky discovery: it came
from an attempt to make element 117 by
bombarding a 249Bk target with a beam
Mc
Lv
796
Ts
Og
Credit: ITAR-TASS News Agency / Alamy Stock
Photo.
of 48Ca, but 28% of the target had decayed
into 249Cf, thereby producing element
118 instead2.
An earlier claim3 for element 118 had
come not from Russia, but the Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory, in 1999.
Soon after the death of Glenn Seaborg,
who had led or taken part in the discovery
of ten elements including plutonium, three
decay chains were reported, products of a
krypton beam into a lead target. It somewhat
seemed too good to be true.
It was. Other groups around the world,
along with the Berkeley team itself, were
unable to reproduce these decay chains —
prompting the Berkeley team to reanalyse
the original data. When evidence of the
chains couldn’t be found, the article was
retracted4 by all authors except for Victor
Ninov, the first author, who had been in
charge of analysing the raw data. By the
time the retraction appeared, in July 2002,
Ninov had been dismissed from Berkeley for
scientific misconduct in May5, and had filed
a grievance procedure6.
Today, the discovery of the last element
of the periodic table as we know it is
undisputed, but its structure and properties
remain a mystery. No chemistry has been
performed on this radioactive giant: 294Og
has a half-life of less than a millisecond
before it succumbs to α-decay.
Theoretical models however suggest it
may not conform to the periodic trends. As
a noble gas, you would expect oganesson
to have closed valence shells, ending with
a filled 7s27p6 configuration. But in 2017, a
US–New Zealand collaboration predicted
that isn’t the case7. Instead the relativistic
effects — discrepancies between expected
and observed behaviours caused by
relativity — may result in the loss of shell
structure. These effects are seen across the
periodic table, increasing as nuclei get larger.
Oganesson seems to have reached the point
where electrons form an evenly distributed
gas of charge. Such changes affect an
element’s properties: oganesson may well
be a solid at room temperature, and more
reactive than its noble family as the electrons
in its p orbitals can be removed more easily.
If the models hold true, it could be the
end of periodicity as we know it: a turning
point at the join of chemistry and physics.
Just like its maverick father, oganesson could
be very interesting indeed.
❐
Kit Chapman
Comment Editor at Chemistry World.
Twitter: @ChemistryKit
e-mail:
Published online: 21 June 2018
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41557-018-0098-4
References
1. Oganessian Y. et al. JINR Commun. https://doi.
org/10.2172/15007307 (2002).
2. Karol, P. J. et al. Pure Appl. Chem. 88, 155–160 (2015).
3. Ninov, V. et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 83, 1104–1107 (1999).
4. Ninov, V. et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 039901 (2002).
5. Johnson, G. At Lawrence Berkeley, physicists say a colleague took
them for a ride. New York Times (15 October 2002).
6. Schwarzschild, B. Phys. Today 55, 15–17 (2002).
7. Jerabek, P. et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 053001 (2018).
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