
Stable nuclides are
nuclide
A nuclide (or nucleide, from nucleus, also known as nuclear species) is a class of atoms characterized by their number of protons, ''Z'', their number of neutrons, ''N'', and their nuclear energy state.
The word ''nuclide'' was coined by Truman ...
s that are not radioactive and so (unlike
radionuclide
A radionuclide (radioactive nuclide, radioisotope or radioactive isotope) is a nuclide that has excess nuclear energy, making it unstable. This excess energy can be used in one of three ways: emitted from the nucleus as gamma radiation; transfer ...
s) do not spontaneously undergo
radioactive decay
Radioactive decay (also known as nuclear decay, radioactivity, radioactive disintegration, or nuclear disintegration) is the process by which an unstable atomic nucleus loses energy by radiation. A material containing unstable nuclei is consid ...
. When such nuclides are referred to in relation to specific elements, they are usually termed
stable isotopes.
The 80 elements with one or more stable isotopes comprise a total of 251 nuclides that have not been known to decay using current equipment (see list at the end of this article). Of these 80 elements, 26 have only one stable isotope; they are thus termed
monoisotopic. The rest have more than one stable isotope.
Tin has ten stable isotopes, the largest number of stable isotopes known for an element.
Definition of stability, and naturally occurring nuclides
Most naturally occurring
nuclide
A nuclide (or nucleide, from nucleus, also known as nuclear species) is a class of atoms characterized by their number of protons, ''Z'', their number of neutrons, ''N'', and their nuclear energy state.
The word ''nuclide'' was coined by Truman ...
s are stable (about 251; see list at the end of this article), and about 34 more (total of 286) are known to be radioactive with sufficiently long half-lives (also known) to occur primordially. If the half-life of a
nuclide
A nuclide (or nucleide, from nucleus, also known as nuclear species) is a class of atoms characterized by their number of protons, ''Z'', their number of neutrons, ''N'', and their nuclear energy state.
The word ''nuclide'' was coined by Truman ...
is comparable to, or greater than, the Earth's age (4.5 billion years), a significant amount will have survived since the
formation of the Solar System, and then is said to be
primordial
Primordial may refer to:
* Primordial era, an era after the Big Bang. See Chronology of the universe
* Primordial sea (a.k.a. primordial ocean, ooze or soup). See Abiogenesis
* Primordial nuclide, nuclides, a few radioactive, that formed before ...
. It will then contribute in that way to the natural isotopic composition of a chemical element. Primordially present radioisotopes are easily detected with half-lives as short as 700 million years (e.g.,
235U). This is the present limit of detection, as shorter-lived nuclides have not yet been detected undisputedly in nature except when recently produced, such as decay products or cosmic ray spallation.
Many naturally occurring radioisotopes (another 53 or so, for a total of about 339) exhibit still shorter half-lives than 700 million years, but they are made freshly, as daughter products of decay processes of primordial nuclides (for example, radium from uranium) or from ongoing energetic reactions, such as
cosmogenic nuclides produced by present bombardment of Earth by
cosmic rays (for example,
14C made from nitrogen).
Some isotopes that are classed as stable (i.e. no radioactivity has been observed for them) are predicted to have extremely long half-lives (sometimes as high as 10
18 years or more).
If the predicted half-life falls into an experimentally accessible range, such isotopes have a chance to move from the list of stable nuclides to the radioactive category, once their activity is observed. For example,
209Bi and
180W were formerly classed as stable, but were found to be
alpha
Alpha (uppercase , lowercase ; grc, ἄλφα, ''álpha'', or ell, άλφα, álfa) is the first letter of the Greek alphabet. In the system of Greek numerals, it has a value of one. Alpha is derived from the Phoenician letter aleph , whic ...
-active in 2003. However, such nuclides do not change their status as primordial when they are found to be radioactive.
Most stable isotopes on Earth are believed to have been formed in processes of
nucleosynthesis, either in the
Big Bang
The Big Bang event is a physical theory that describes how the universe expanded from an initial state of high density and temperature. Various cosmological models of the Big Bang explain the evolution of the observable universe from the ...
, or in generations of stars that preceded the
formation of the solar system. However, some stable isotopes also show abundance variations in the earth as a result of decay from long-lived radioactive nuclides. These decay-products are termed
radiogenic isotopes, in order to distinguish them from the much larger group of 'non-radiogenic' isotopes.
Isotopes per element
Of the known chemical elements, 80 elements have at least one stable nuclide. These comprise the first 82 elements from
hydrogen to
lead, with the two exceptions,
technetium (element 43) and
promethium
Promethium is a chemical element with the symbol Pm and atomic number 61. All of its isotopes are radioactive; it is extremely rare, with only about 500–600 grams naturally occurring in Earth's crust at any given time. Promethium is one of onl ...
(element 61), that do not have any stable nuclides. As of November 2022, there were a total of 251 known "stable" nuclides. In this definition, "stable" means a nuclide that has never been observed to decay against the natural background. Thus, these elements have half-lives too long to be measured by any means, direct or indirect.
Stable isotopes:
* 1 element (
tin) has 10 stable isotopes
* 5 elements have 7 stable isotopes apiece
* 7 elements have 6 stable isotopes apiece
* 11 elements have 5 stable isotopes apiece
* 9 elements have 4 stable isotopes apiece
* 5 elements have 3 stable isotopes apiece
* 16 elements have 2 stable isotopes apiece
* 26 elements have 1 single stable isotope.
These last 26 are thus called ''
monoisotopic elements''.
The mean number of stable isotopes for elements which have at least one stable isotope is 251/80 = 3.1375.
Physical magic numbers and odd and even proton and neutron count
Stability of isotopes is affected by the ratio of protons to neutrons, and also by presence of certain
magic numbers of neutrons or protons which represent closed and filled quantum shells. These quantum shells correspond to a set of energy levels within the
shell model of the nucleus; filled shells, such as the filled shell of 50 protons for tin, confers unusual stability on the nuclide. As in the case of tin, a magic number for ''Z'', the atomic number, tends to increase the number of stable isotopes for the element.
Just as in the case of electrons, which have the lowest energy state when they occur in pairs in a given orbital, nucleons (both protons and neutrons) exhibit a lower energy state when their number is even, rather than odd. This stability tends to prevent beta decay (in two steps) of many even–even nuclides into another even–even nuclide of the same mass number but lower energy (and of course with two more protons and two fewer neutrons), because decay proceeding one step at a time would have to pass through an odd–odd nuclide of higher energy. Such nuclei thus instead undergo
double beta decay (or are theorized to do so) with half-lives several orders of magnitude larger than the
age of the universe. This makes for a larger number of stable even–even nuclides, which account for 150 of the 251 total. Stable even–even nuclides number as many as three
isobars for some mass numbers, and up to seven isotopes for some atomic numbers.
Conversely, of the 251 known stable nuclides, only five have both an odd number of protons ''and'' odd number of neutrons: hydrogen-2 (
deuterium),
lithium-6,
boron-10,
nitrogen-14, and
tantalum-180m. Also, only four naturally occurring, radioactive odd–odd nuclides have a half-life over a billion years:
potassium-40,
vanadium-50,
lanthanum-138
Naturally occurring lanthanum (57La) is composed of one stable (139La) and one radioactive (138La) isotope, with the stable isotope, 139La, being the most abundant (99.91% natural abundance). There are 38 radioisotopes that have been characterize ...
, and
lutetium-176
Naturally occurring lutetium (71Lu) is composed of one stable isotope 175Lu (97.41% natural abundance) and one long-lived radioisotope, 176Lu with a half-life of 3.78 × 1010 years (2.59% natural abundance). Thirty-five radioisotopes have been cha ...
. Odd–odd
primordial nuclide
In geochemistry, geophysics and nuclear physics, primordial nuclides, also known as primordial isotopes, are nuclides found on Earth that have existed in their current form since before Earth was formed. Primordial nuclides were present in the ...
s are rare because most odd–odd nuclei are unstable with respect to
beta decay, because the decay products are even–even, and are therefore more strongly bound, due to
nuclear pairing effects.
Yet another effect of the instability of an odd number of either type of nucleons is that odd-numbered elements tend to have fewer stable isotopes. Of the 26
monoisotopic elements (those with only a single stable isotope), all but one have an odd atomic number, and all but one has an even number of neutrons—the single exception to both rules being beryllium.
The end of the stable elements in the periodic table occurs after
lead, largely due to the fact that nuclei with 128 neutrons—two neutrons above the
magic number 126—are extraordinarily unstable and almost immediately shed alpha particles.
This also contributes to the very short half-lives of
astatine,
radon, and
francium
Francium is a chemical element with the symbol Fr and atomic number 87. It is extremely radioactive; its most stable isotope, francium-223 (originally called actinium K after the natural decay chain it appears in), has a half-life of only 22&nb ...
relative to heavier elements. A similar phenomenon occurs to a much lesser extent with 84 neutrons—two neutrons above the magic number 82—where various isotopes of elements in the
lanthanide series exhibit alpha decay.
Nuclear isomers, including a "stable" one
The count of 251 known stable nuclides includes tantalum-180m, since even though its decay and instability is automatically implied by its notation of "metastable", this has still not yet been observed. All "stable" isotopes (stable by observation, not theory) are the ground states of nuclei, with the exception of tantalum-180m, which is a
nuclear isomer or excited state. The ground state of this particular nucleus, tantalum-180, is radioactive with a comparatively short half-life of 8 hours; in contrast, the decay of the excited nuclear isomer is extremely strongly forbidden by spin-parity selection rules. It has been reported experimentally by direct observation that the half-life of
180mTa to gamma decay must be more than 10
15 years. Other possible modes of
180mTa decay (beta decay, electron capture, and alpha decay) have also never been observed.
Still-unobserved decay
It is expected that some continual improvement of experimental sensitivity will allow discovery of very mild radioactivity (instability) of some isotopes that are considered to be stable today. For an example of a recent discovery, it was not until 2003 that
bismuth-209 (the only primordial isotope of bismuth) was shown to be very mildly radioactive, confirming theoretical predictions from
nuclear physics that bismuth-209 would decay very slowly by
alpha emission.
Isotopes that are theoretically believed to be unstable but have not been observed to decay are termed as observationally stable. Currently there are 161 theoretically unstable isotopes, 45 of which have been observed in detail with no sign of decay, the lightest in any case being
36Ar.
Summary table for numbers of each class of nuclides
This is a summary table from
List of nuclides. Note that numbers are not exact and may change slightly in the future, as nuclides are observed to be radioactive, or new half-lives are determined to some precision.
List of stable nuclides
Abbreviations for predicted unobserved decay
:
A for alpha decay, B for beta decay, 2B for double beta decay, E for electron capture, 2E for double electron capture, IT for isomeric transition, SF for spontaneous fission, * for the nuclides whose half-lives have lower bound.
^ Tantalum-180m is a "metastable isotope" meaning that it is an excited
nuclear isomer of tantalum-180. See
isotopes of tantalum. However, the half-life of this nuclear isomer is so long that it has never been observed to decay, and it thus occurs as an "observationally nonradioactive"
primordial nuclide
In geochemistry, geophysics and nuclear physics, primordial nuclides, also known as primordial isotopes, are nuclides found on Earth that have existed in their current form since before Earth was formed. Primordial nuclides were present in the ...
, as a minor isotope of tantalum. This is the only case of a nuclear isomer which has a half-life so long that it has never been observed to decay. It is thus included in this list.
^^
Bismuth-209 had long been believed to be stable, due to its unusually long half-life of 2.01 · 10
19 years, which is more than a billion (1000 million) times the age of the universe.
See also
*
Isotope geochemistry
*
List of elements by stability of isotopes
*
List of nuclides (991 nuclides in order of stability, all with half-lives > one hour)
*
Mononuclidic element
*
Periodic table
The periodic table, also known as the periodic table of the (chemical) elements, is a rows and columns arrangement of the chemical elements. It is widely used in chemistry, physics, and other sciences, and is generally seen as an icon of ch ...
*
Primordial nuclide
In geochemistry, geophysics and nuclear physics, primordial nuclides, also known as primordial isotopes, are nuclides found on Earth that have existed in their current form since before Earth was formed. Primordial nuclides were present in the ...
*
Radionuclide
A radionuclide (radioactive nuclide, radioisotope or radioactive isotope) is a nuclide that has excess nuclear energy, making it unstable. This excess energy can be used in one of three ways: emitted from the nucleus as gamma radiation; transfer ...
*
Stable isotope ratio
*
Table of nuclides
*
Valley of stability
References
Book references
*{{cite book
, last=Various
, editor=Lide, David R.
, year=2002
, title=Handbook of Chemistry & Physics
, edition=88th
, publisher=CRC
, url=http://www.hbcpnetbase.com/
, access-date=2008-05-23
, isbn=978-0-8493-0486-6
, oclc=179976746
, archive-date=2017-07-24
, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170724011402/http://www.hbcpnetbase.com/
, url-status=dead
External links
The LIVEChart of Nuclides - IAEA AlphaDelta: Stable Isotope fractionation calculatorNational Isotope Development CenterReference information on isotopes, and coordination and management of isotope production, availability, and distribution
Isotope Development & Production for Research and Applications (IDPRA)U.S. Department of Energy program for isotope production and production research and development
IsosciencesUse and development of stable isotope labels in synthetic and biological molecules
*Stable
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