Th

Thorium

Element 90 · 232.038 u

Actinide f-block Period 7 Solid at RT Radioactive t½ 14.05 billion years Wikipedia →

Thorium is a radioactive actinide being researched as a potential nuclear fuel.

Physical Properties

Atomic Mass232.038 u
Density11.72 g/cm³
Melting Point2115.0 K
Boiling Point5061.0 K
AppearanceSilvery, often with black tarnish
State at Room TempSolid

Chemical Properties

Electronegativity1.3 (Pauling)
1st Ionization Energy587.0 kJ/mol
Electron Affinity112.72 kJ/mol
Oxidation States+2, +3, +4

Atomic Properties

Electron Configuration[Rn] 6d2 7s2
Atomic Radius180.0 pm
Van der Waals Radius237.0 pm

Discovery

Discovered ByJons Jacob Berzelius
Discovery Year1829
LocationStockholm, Sweden
Named AfterThor, the Norse god of thunder

About Thorium

Thorium is three times more abundant than uranium. Thorium reactors produce less long-lived waste and cannot melt down. Gas mantles for camping lanterns were historically made with thorium oxide.

Uses & Applications

Potential nuclear fuel, gas lantern mantles, high-temperature ceramics, welding electrodes, and aerospace alloys.

Fun Fact

Thorium reactors cannot melt down and produce waste dangerous for hundreds rather than thousands of years.

Isotopes

Mass Number Abundance Half-Life Stable
228 - 1.9116 years No
230 - 75,380 years No
232 1.0% 14.05 billion years No

Electron Configuration

[Rn] 6d2 7s2

Compare

Compare Thorium with other elements

Open Comparison Tool
← Actinium Back to Table Protactinium →