Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Plutonium (Encore)
Episode Date: October 23, 2023In 1939, the last naturally occurring element on Earth, Francium, was discovered. However, the periodic table of elements still wasn’t full. The next year, a non-natural element was discovered: Pl...utonium. This new element had fascinating properties which made it incredibly useful and incredibly dangerous. Learn more about plutonium, how it is made, and what it can do on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors BetterHelp Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month. Newspapers.com Newspapers.com is like a time machine. Dive into their extensive online archives to explore history as it happened. With over 800 million digitized newspaper pages spanning three centuries, Newspapers.com provides an unparalleled gateway to the past, with papers from the US, UK, Canada, Australia and beyond. Use the code “EverythingEverywhere” at checkout to get 20% off a publisher extra subscription at newspapers.com. ButcherBox ButcherBox is the perfect solution for anyone looking to eat high-quality, sustainably sourced meat without the hassle of going to the grocery store. With ButcherBox, you can enjoy a variety of grass-fed beef, heritage pork, free-range chicken, and wild-caught seafood delivered straight to your door every month. ButcherBox.com/Daily Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
In 1939, the last naturally occurring element on Earth, francium, was discovered.
However, the periodic table of the elements still wasn't full.
The next year, a non-natural element was discovered, plutonium.
This new element had fascinating properties, which made it incredibly useful and incredibly dangerous.
Learn more about plutonium, how it's made, and what it can do on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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To start a discussion of plutonium, we might as well start with what it is and where it comes from.
plutonium has the atomic number 94, which means it has 94 protons.
Its discovery is credited to Nobel laureate Glenn Seaborg, who discovered 10 different elements
on the periodic table.
If you remember back to my episode on the Element Uranium, which is Element 92, it was given
its name from the then newly discovered planet Uranus.
Excuse me, Uranus.
Just months before the discovery of plutonium in 1940, Element 93 was discovered by bombarding
uranium with a cyclotron, and it was called Neptunium.
the next planet after Uranus. Excuse me, Uranus.
Then, later that year, Seaborgana's group at the University of California, Berkeley,
bombarded uranium with Deuterium, a hydrogen isotope, which created Element 94,
and it was named after the planet after Neptune, or at least it was at that time, Pluto.
Only a few atoms of it were actually ever initially created.
The abbreviation for plutonium is P-U, even though it really should be P-L,
and there are no other elements with P-L as an abbreviation.
Seaborg thought it would be funny to call it P-U and the abbreviation stuck.
As I mentioned in the introduction, plutonium isn't considered to be a naturally occurring element.
However, that isn't 100% true.
There are actually extremely small amounts of naturally occurring plutonium on Earth.
A study published in May of 2021 found an extremely small trace amount of plutonium on the ocean floor,
which was believed to be residual from the formation of the solar system.
Likewise, there's also very small amounts that are created through the natural radioactive decay of uranium.
In 1942, after the first controlled nuclear fission reaction took place by Enrico Fermi at the University of Chicago,
enough plutonium was finally produced where its physical properties could actually be studied.
The process of nuclear fission is how almost all plutonium is created.
There are 20 known isotopes of plutonium, but only two that are widely created,
plutonium 238 and plutonium 239.
plutonium 239 is created when a uranium 235 atom splits, ejecting a neutron which is captured
by a uranium 238 atom, turning it into uranium 239. A neutron then engages in beta decay,
turning into a proton, and ejecting an electron, turning it into Neptune 29, and then a second
beta decay occurs, turning it into plutonium 239. Plutonium 238 is created by uranium 238
capturing a Deuterium atom to become Neptunium-238, and then a beta decay occurs to become
plutonium-238. And no, there will not be a quiz at the end of the episode. If you remember back
to my episode on uranium, the two common isotopes of uranium were 235 and 238, and they
behaved differently in nuclear reactions. In particular, U-235, which only constitutes 0.7% of all-natural
uranium, is the stuff you need to make bombs and nuclear reactors. It's called fizzile. By the same
token, plutonium 238 and plutonium 239 behaved differently in nuclear reactions as well.
Plutonium 239 is fizzile, just like uranium 235. That means it can be used in bombs and reactors.
In fact, the atomic bomb that which has dropped on Nagasaki, nicknamed Fat Man, was a plutonium
bomb. Plutonium 238 is not fizzile. However, it's highly radioactive, with a half-life of only 87.4
years. And I'll be talking about that more in a bit. So what are the properties of plutonium? What's it like?
Plutonium is a metal. Physically, it has a silvery appearance like most metals. However, it oxidizes
quickly, which can change its color. It has the unique property of not being magnetic. It will also
expand and shrink from heating and cooling far more than any other metal. And furthermore, it's a very
poor conductor of both heat and electricity for a metal. One of the other, and perhaps most important
attributes for this discussion is that plutonium is highly toxic. By toxic, I'm putting aside
the fact that it can be highly radioactive. Just as an element, plutonium is very poisonous, and it's
about as toxic as some nerve gases. It can accumulate in a person's bones, and it's something that you
really don't want to mess around with. When plutonium was first being produced in quantity during the
Manhattan Project, no one really knew anything about it. One researcher, Donald Mastic, accidentally
swallowed a small amount of plutonium chloride, and it was detectable in his body for 30 years.
From 1945 to 1947, 18 people actually had plutonium injected into their bodies for testing.
One man named Albert Stevens, a house painter from Ohio, was injected with 3.5 microcuries
of plutonium without his informed consent.
Astonishingly, he lived to the age of 79, 20 years after his injection, and died of a heart attack
not cancer. It is believed that he received the highest accumulated dose of radiation of any human
in history. On top of being poisonous and radioactive, it can also spontaneously burst into flame
at room temperatures if it's left exposed to open air. There have been plutonium fires at factories
that create nuclear weapon components. And as if poison, radiation, and flames weren't enough,
P.U. 239 can reach criticality at about a third of the mass of uranium 235.
This can result in what are called criticality accidents, where people handling enough plutonium
can have massive amounts of radiation exposure. While this can't result in an explosion,
it can provide a lethal dose of radiation, and such criticality accidents have happened almost 60 times.
If this stuff is so nasty, and it is, what's the point of it? Why bother making it at all?
Well, as I mentioned before, the initial use was for nuclear weapons.
Plutonium 239 is the primary isotope used for nuclear weapons, and it's much more fizzile than uranium
235. Plutonium 239 is fashioned into what's called a pit, which is basically a small sphere.
Neutron deflecting substances coat the exterior which lessen the amount of plutonium required.
Since the end of the Cold War, demand for plutonium weapons use has decreased substantially.
The quality of the plutonium for reactors or weapons is determined by the amount of plutonium
240 which is in it. Weapons grade plutonium requires less than 7% plutonium 240, and because the isotopes are
chemically identical, you have to separate them via enrichment, just like you would enriching uranium,
which is really hard to do. Likewise, plutonium can also be used as a fuel for nuclear reactors.
While it isn't the primary fuel used in reactors, there are many experimental reactors that could use
plutonium and consume it completely. For both weapons and reactor fuel, there are alternatives to plutonium.
However, there is one use for which there really is no substitute, and you pretty much have to use plutonium.
And that is for deep space probes.
As I mentioned before, plutonium 238 is highly radioactive.
This isn't the isotope that's used in bombs and reactors, however.
Because plutonium 238 has such a short half-life of only 87 years, it generates a lot of heat.
Plutonium 238, if just left to itself, will glow red-hot just like an iron poker in a furnace.
Hot enough to boil water. Moreover, it will remain that hot with no outside energy added for decades.
In theory, a coffee mug made out of plutonium 238 would keep your coffee warm your entire life.
Granted, if you're drinking out of a coffee mug made of plutonium, your life might not be very long, but the point remains it's hot for a really long time.
So what does this have to do with space probes? Solar panels can provide sufficient energy so long as you are sufficiently close to the sun.
Even rovers and orbiter sent to Mars can get sufficient power from the sun through solar panels.
However, beyond Mars, the light of the sun just isn't strong enough to use solar panels.
At Jupiter, for example, the brightness of the sun is only 4% of what it is on Earth.
So how can you power spacecraft that are that far away?
The answer is with something called a radioisotope thermoelectric generator, or RTG.
What an RTG can do is take advantage of something called the thermoelectric effect,
which can convert heat directly to electricity.
While there are 22 known isotopes of radioactive elements which could in theory power an RTG,
there is only one that can actually practically power it, and that is plutonium 238.
The thermoelectric effect isn't that efficient, so it's seldom used on applications on Earth,
as it's more efficient to boil water and turn a turbine.
One terrestrial use of RTGs was nuclear-powered lighthouses created by the Soviet Union.
These lighthouses had no staff and just operated on all.
autopilot. Another use, believe it or not, was plutonium-powered pacemakers. There are probably a few
dozen people in the world that still have these pacemakers installed in their body. The RTG was about
the size of a watch battery. So long as the plutonium remained fully encased inside the container,
the toxicity and radiation really aren't that much of an issue. Plutonium 238 is an alpha
emitter, which is a type of radiation that can easily be blocked with as little as a piece of paper.
In deep space, there really aren't a lot of options, which is why almost every probe sent past the orbit of Mars
and several Martian landers, including the Viking landers and the Curiosity rover, have had plutonium-based
RTGs as their power source. There have been some RTGs used in satellites in Earth's orbit,
and some were used on the moon, but it really isn't necessary to use them anymore as solar cell
efficiently has become so much better. Also, you don't want to be putting plutonium on something
that might re-enter the Earth's atmosphere.
A single kilogram of plutonium 238 is about the size of two marshmallows, or a bit bigger than a golf ball,
and can give off 500 watts of heat continuously. RTG fuel is usually in the form of pellets of plutonium
dioxide, and the amount can range from a few kilograms to as much as 35 kilograms.
One problem NASA had recently was a shortage of plutonium. The United States stopped making plutonium
238 in 1988. NASA started buying it from Russia in 1993, a whopping 16 and a half kilograms of it,
but they also stopped producing it as well. The U.S. government actually started to make plutonium
238 for NASA in 2015 for the first time in decades, albeit the amount produced each year is still
quite small. It takes about two to three years of exposure to a nuclear reactor to make a batch of
plutonium 238. Current production is only about 400 grams a year, but they hope to triple
that by the year 2025. The extreme cost and difficulty in the production of plutonium 238 makes it
one of the most valuable substances on Earth. Plutonium is serious stuff. It's extremely toxic and
radioactive, but thankfully most of us will never encounter it in our lives. Nonetheless,
certain isotopes of plutonium have properties that no other isotopes of any other elements have.
And if it wasn't for plutonium, we simply wouldn't be able to explore the outer solar system.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Peter Bennett and Cameron Kiever.
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