Physical In the
periodic table, americium is located to the right of plutonium, to the left of curium, and below the lanthanide
europium, with which it shares many physical and chemical properties. Americium is a highly radioactive element. When freshly prepared, it has a silvery-white metallic lustre, but then slowly tarnishes in air. With a density of 12 g/cm3, americium is less dense than both curium (13.52 g/cm3) and plutonium (19.8 g/cm3); but has a higher density than europium (5.264 g/cm3)—mostly because of its higher atomic mass. Americium is relatively soft and easily deformable and has a significantly lower
bulk modulus than the actinides before it: Th, Pa, U, Np and Pu. The crystal structure of americium changes with pressure and temperature. When compressed at room temperature to 5 GPa, α-Am transforms to the β modification, which has a
face-centered cubic (
fcc) symmetry, space group Fmm and lattice constant
a = 489 pm. This
fcc structure is equivalent to the closest packing with the sequence ABC. There is no consistency on the status of this phase in the literature, which also sometimes lists the α, β and γ phases as I, II and III. The β-γ transition is accompanied by a 6% decrease in the crystal volume; although theory also predicts a significant volume change for the α-β transition, it is not observed experimentally. The pressure of the α-β transition decreases with increasing temperature, and when α-americium is heated at ambient pressure, at 770 °C it changes into an
fcc phase which is different from β-Am, and at 1075 °C it converts to a
body-centered cubic structure. The pressure-temperature phase diagram of americium is thus rather similar to those of lanthanum,
praseodymium and
neodymium. As with many other actinides, self-damage of the crystal structure due to alpha-particle irradiation is intrinsic to americium. It is especially noticeable at low temperatures, where the mobility of the produced
structure defects is relatively low, by broadening of
X-ray diffraction peaks. This effect makes somewhat uncertain the temperature of americium and some of its properties, such as electrical
resistivity. So for americium-241, the resistivity at 4.2 K increases with time from about 2 μOhm·cm to 10 μOhm·cm after 40 hours, and saturates at about 16 μOhm·cm after 140 hours. This effect is less pronounced at room temperature, due to annihilation of radiation defects; also heating to room temperature the sample which was kept for hours at low temperatures restores its resistivity. In fresh samples, the resistivity gradually increases with temperature from about 2 μOhm·cm at
liquid helium to 69 μOhm·cm at room temperature; this behavior is similar to that of neptunium, uranium, thorium and
protactinium, but is different from plutonium and curium which show a rapid rise up to 60 K followed by saturation. The room temperature value for americium is lower than that of neptunium, plutonium and curium, but higher than for uranium, thorium and protactinium. The
thermal expansion coefficient of americium is slightly anisotropic and amounts to along the shorter
a axis and for the longer
c hexagonal axis.
Chemical Americium metal readily reacts with oxygen and dissolves in aqueous
acids. The most stable
oxidation state for americium is +3. The chemistry of americium(III) has many similarities to the chemistry of
lanthanide(III) compounds. For example, trivalent americium forms insoluble
fluoride,
oxalate,
iodate,
hydroxide,
phosphate and other salts. The absorption spectra have sharp peaks, due to
f-
f transitions' in the visible and near-infrared regions. Typically, Am(III) has absorption maxima at ca. 504 and 811 nm, Am(V) at ca. 514 and 715 nm, and Am(VI) at ca. 666 and 992 nm. Whereas the Am4+ ions are generally unstable in solutions and readily convert to Am3+, compounds such as
americium dioxide (AmO2) and
americium(IV) fluoride (AmF4) are stable in the solid state. In acidic aqueous solution the ion is unstable with respect to
disproportionation. The reaction : is typical. The chemistry of Am(V) and Am(VI) is comparable to the chemistry of
uranium in those oxidation states. In particular, compounds like and are comparable to
uranates and the ion is comparable to the
uranyl ion, . Such compounds can be prepared by oxidation of Am(III) in dilute nitric acid with
ammonium persulfate. Other oxidising agents that have been used include
silver(I,III) oxide,
ozone and
sodium persulfate.
Isotopes There are 19 known americium
isotopes and 11
nuclear isomers, having mass numbers 229 through 247.
Americium-241 decays to
237Np emitting alpha particles of several different energies, mostly at 5.486 MeV (85.2%) and 5.443 MeV (12.8%). Because the resulting states are
metastable,
gamma rays are also emitted at discrete energies between 26.3 and 158.5 keV, by far the strongest is at 59.5 keV. The ground state of
Americium-242 is a short-lived isotope with a half-life of 16.02 h. It mostly (82.7%) converts by β-decay to 242Cm, but also by
electron capture to 242Pu (17.3%).
Americium-243 transforms by α-emission into 239Np. ==Chemical compounds==