Physical properties A promethium atom has 61 electrons, arranged in the
configuration [
Xe] 4f5 6s2. The seven 4f and 6s electrons are
valence electrons. In forming compounds, the atom loses its two outermost electrons and one 4f-electron, which belongs to an open subshell. The element's atomic radius is the second largest among all the lanthanides but is only slightly greater than those of the neighboring elements.). Many properties of promethium rely on its position among lanthanides and are intermediate between those of neodymium and samarium. For example, the melting point, the first three ionization energies, and the hydration energy are greater than those of neodymium and lower than those of samarium; In May 2024, a promethium coordination complex with neutral PyDGA ligands was characterized in aqueous solution. Treatment of acidic solutions containing ions with
ammonia results in a gelatinous light-brown sediment of hydroxide, Promethium hydroxide|, which is insoluble in water. When dissolved in
hydrochloric acid, a water-soluble yellow salt, Promethium(III) chloride|, is produced; similarly, when dissolved in nitric acid, a nitrate results, Promethium(III) nitrate|. The latter is also well-soluble; when dried, it forms pink crystals, similar to Neodymium(III) nitrate|. The electron configuration for is [Xe] 4f4, and the color of the ion is pink. The ground state term symbol is 5I4. The sulfate is slightly soluble, like the other cerium group sulfates. Cell parameters have been calculated for its octahydrate; they led to the conclusion that the density of is 2.86 g/cm3. The oxalate, , has the lowest solubility of all lanthanide oxalates. Unlike the nitrate, the
oxide is similar to the corresponding samarium salt and not the neodymium salt. As-synthesized, e.g. by heating the oxalate, it is a white or lavender-colored powder with disordered structure. This powder crystallizes in a cubic lattice upon heating to 600 °C. Further annealing at 800 °C and then at 1750 °C irreversibly transforms it to
monoclinic and
hexagonal phases, respectively, and the last two phases can be interconverted by adjusting the annealing time and temperature. Thermodynamic properties of Pm2+ suggests that the dihalides are stable, similar to NdCl2 and SmCl2.
Isotopes Promethium is the only
lanthanide and one of only two elements among the first 83 with no stable or long-lived (
primordial) isotopes. This is a result of a
rarely occurring effect of the
liquid drop model of the nucleus and stabilities of neighbor element isotopes; it is also the least stable element of the first 84 elements. The primary decay products are
neodymium and
samarium isotopes (promethium-146 decays to both, the lighter isotopes generally to neodymium via
positron decay and
electron capture, and the heavier isotopes to samarium via beta decay). Promethium
nuclear isomers may decay to other promethium isotopes and one isotope (145Pm) has a very rare alpha decay mode to stable
praseodymium-141. The most stable isotope of the element is promethium-145, which has a specific activity of and a half-life of 17.7 years via
electron capture. Because it has 84 neutrons (two more than 82, which is a
magic number corresponding to a stable neutron configuration), it may emit an
alpha particle (which has 2 neutrons) to form praseodymium-141 with 82 neutrons. Thus, it is the only promethium isotope with an experimentally observed
alpha decay. Its
partial half-life for alpha decay is about 6.3 years, and the relative probability for a 145Pm nucleus to decay in this way is 2.8 %. Several other promethium isotopes such as 144Pm, 146Pm, and 147Pm also have a positive energy release for alpha decay; their alpha decays are predicted to occur but have not been observed. In total, 41 isotopes of promethium are known, ranging from 126Pm to 166Pm. The element also has 18 nuclear isomers, with
mass numbers of 133 to 142, 144, 148, 149, 152, and 154 (some mass numbers have more than one isomer). The most stable of them is promethium-148m, with a half-life of 41.3 days; this is longer than the half-lives of its ground state, and all promethium isotopes except for 143-147. ==Occurrence==