Dictionary Definition
deuterium n : an isotope of hydrogen which has
one neutron (as opposed to zero neutrons in hydrogen) [syn:
heavy
hydrogen]
User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
- /djuːˈtɪɹiəm/, /dju:"tIri@m/
- Hyphenation: deu·te·ri·um
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
isotope of hydrogen
See also
Extensive Definition
Deuterium, also called heavy hydrogen, is a
stable
isotope of hydrogen
with a natural
abundance in the oceans of Earth of
approximately one atom in
6500 of hydrogen (~154 PPM).
Deuterium thus accounts for approximately 0.015% (on a weight
basis, 0.030%) of all naturally occurring hydrogen in the oceans on
Earth (see
VSMOW; the abundance changes slightly from one kind of natural
water to another). Deuterium abundance on Jupiter is about 6 atoms
in 10,000 (0.06% atom basis); these ratios presumably reflect the
early solar nebula ratios, and those after the Big Bang. There
is little deuterium in the interior of the Sun, since
thermonuclear reactions destroy it. However, it continues to
persist in the outer solar atmosphere at roughly the same
concentration as in Jupiter.
The nucleus of
deuterium, called a deuteron, contains one proton and one neutron, whereas the far more
common hydrogen nucleus contains no neutrons. The isotope name is
formed from the Greek deuteros meaning "second", to denote the two
particles composing the nucleus.
Differences between deuterium and common hydrogen (protium)
Chemical symbol
Deuterium is frequently represented by the chemical symbol D. Since it is an isotope of hydrogen with mass number 2, it is also represented by ²H. IUPAC allows both D and ²H, although ²H is preferred. The reason deuterium has a distinct chemical symbol may be its large mass difference with protium (¹H); deuterium has a mass of 2.014 u, compared to the mean hydrogen atomic weight of 1.007947 u, and protium's mass of 1.007825 u. The isotope weight ratios within other chemical elements are largely insignificant in this regard, explaining the lack of unique isotope symbols elsewhere.Natural abundance
Deuterium occurs in trace amounts naturally as
deuterium gas, written ²H2
or D2, but most natural occurrence in the universe is bonded with a
typical ¹H atom, a gas called hydrogen
deuteride (HD or ¹H²H).
The existence of deuterium on Earth, elsewhere in
the solar system
(as confirmed by planetary probes), and in the spectra of stars, is an important datum in
cosmology.
Stellar fusion destroys deuterium, and there are no known natural
processes (for example, see the rare cluster
decay), other than the Big
Bang nucleosynthesis, which might have produced deuterium at
anything close to the observed natural abundance of deuterium. This
abundance seems to be a very similar fraction of hydrogen, wherever
hydrogen is found. Thus, the existence of deuterium is one of the
arguments in favor of the Big Bang theory
over the steady
state theory of the universe. It is estimated that the
abundances of deuterium have not evolved significantly since their
production more than 14 billion years ago.
The world's leading "producer" of deuterium
(technically, merely enricher or concentrator of deuterium) was
Canada,
until 1997 when the last plant was shut down (see more in the
heavy
water article). Canada uses heavy water as a neutron
moderator for the operation of the CANDU
reactor design. India is now probably the world's largest
concentrator of heavy water, also used in nuclear power
reactors.
Physical properties
The physical properties of deuterium compounds
can be different from the hydrogen analogs; for example, D2O is more viscous than
H2O.. Deuterium
behaves chemically similarly to ordinary hydrogen, but there are
differences in bond energy and length for compounds of heavy
hydrogen isotopes which are larger than the isotopic differences in
any other element. Bonds involving deuterium and tritium are somewhat stronger
than the corresponding bonds in light hydrogen, and these
differences are enough to make significant changes in biological
reactions (see heavy
water).
Deuterium can replace the normal hydrogen in
water molecules to form heavy water
(D2O), which is about 10.6% more dense than normal water (enough
that ice made from it sinks in ordinary water). Heavy water is
slightly toxic in eukaryotic animals, with 25%
substitution of the body water causing cell division problems and
sterility, and 50% substitution causing death by cytotoxic syndrome
(bone marrow failure and gastrointestinal lining failure). Prokaryotic
organisms, however, can survive and grow in pure heavy water
(though they grow more slowly). Consumption of heavy water would
not pose a health
threat to humans unless very large quantities (in excess of 10
liters) were consumed over many days. Small doses of heavy water (a
few grams in humans, containing an amount of deuterium comparable
to that normally present in the body) are routinely used as
harmless metabolic tracers in humans and animals.
Quantum properties
The deuteron has spin +1 and is thus a boson. The NMR
frequency of deuterium is significantly different from common light
hydrogen. Infrared
spectroscopy also easily differentiates many deuterated
compounds, due to the large difference in IR absorption frequency
seen in the vibration of a chemical bond containing deuterium,
versus light hydrogen. The two stable isotopes of hydrogen can also
be distinguished by using mass
spectrometry.
Nuclear properties
Deuterium is one of only four stable nuclides with an odd number of
protons and odd number of neutrons. (2H, 6Li, 10B, 14N; also, the
long-lived radioactive nuclides 40K, 50V, 138La, 180mTa occur
naturally.) 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. Deuterium, however, benefits from
having its proton and neutron coupled to a spin-1 state, which
gives a stronger nuclear attraction; the corresponding spin-1 state
does not exist in the two-neutron or two-proton system, due to the
Pauli
exclusion principle which would require one or the other
identical particle with the same spin to have some other different
quantum number, such as orbital
angular momentum. But orbital angular momentum of either
particle gives a lower binding
energy for the system, primarily due to increasing distance of
the particles in the steep gradient of the nuclear force. In both
cases, this causes the di-proton and di-neutron nucleus to be
unstable.
Deuterium as an isospin singlet
Due to the similarity in mass and nuclear
properties between the proton and neutron, they are sometimes
considered as two symmetric types of the same object, a nucleon. While only the proton has an electric charge,
this is often negligible due of the weakness of the electromagnetic
interaction relative to the strong
nuclear interaction. The symmetry relating the proton and neutron is known as isospin and denoted \tau.
Isospin is an
SU(2)
symmetry, like ordinary spin, so
is completely analogous to it. The proton and neutron form an isospin doublet, with a "down" state
\downarrow being a neutron, and an "up" state
\uparrow being a proton.
A pair of nucleons can either be in an
antisymmetric state of isospin called singlet, or in a symmetric state
called triplet. In
terms of the "down" state
and "up"
state, the singlet
is
- \frac\Big( |\uparrow \downarrow \rangle - |\downarrow \uparrow \rangle\Big)
The triplet is
\left( \begin \uparrow\uparrow\\
\frac(\uparrow\downarrow + \downarrow\uparrow)\\
\downarrow\downarrow \end \right)
And thus consists of three types of nuclei, which
are supposed to be symmetric - a deuterium nucleus (actually a
highly excited
state of it), a nucleus with two protons, and a nucleus with two
neutrons. The latter two
nuclei are not stable or nearly stable, and therefore so is this
type of deuterium (meaning that it is indeed a highly excited
state of deuterium).
Approximated wavefunction of the deuteron
The total wavefunction of both the
proton and neutron must be
antisymmetric, because they are both fermions. Apart from their
isospin, the two
nucleons also have
spin and
spatial distributions of their wavefunction. The latter is
symmetric if the deuteron is symmetric under parity
(i.e. have an "even" or "positive" parity) , and antisymmetric if
the deuteron is antisymmetric under parity
(i.e. have an "odd" or "negative" parity). The parity
is fully determined by the total orbital
angular momentum of the two nucleons: if it is even then the
parity
is even (positive), and if it is odd then the parity
is odd (negative).
The deuteron, being an isospin singlet, is antisymmetric under
nucleons exchange due to
isospin, and therefore
must be symmetric under the double exchange of their spin and
location. Therefore it can be in either of the following two
different states:
- Symmetric spin and symmetric under parity. In this case, the exchange of the two nucleons will multiply the deuterium wavefunction by (-1) from isospin exchange, (+1) from spin exchange and (+1) from parity (location exchange), for a total of (-1) as needed for antisymmetry.
- Antisymmetric spin and antisymmetric under parity. In this case, the exchange of the two nucleons will multiply the deuterium wavefunction by (-1) from isospin exchange, (-1) from spin exchange and (-1) from parity (location exchange), again for a total of (-1) as needed for antisymmetry.
In the first case the deuteron has is a Spin
triplet, so that its total spin s is
1. It also has an even parity
and therefore even orbital
angular momentum l ; The lower its orbital
angular momentum, the lower its energy. Therefore the lowest
possible energy state has s =1, l =0.
In the second case the deuteron has is a spin
singlet, so that its
total spin s is
0. It also has an odd parity
and therefore odd orbital
angular momentum l . Therefore the lowest possible energy state
has s =0, l =1.
Since s =1 gives a stronger nuclear attraction,
the deuterium ground state
is in the s =1, l =0 state.
The same considerations lead to the possible
states of an isospin
triplet having s =0, l
=even or s =1, l =odd. Thus the state of lowest energy has s =1, l
=1, higher than that of the isospin singlet.
The analysis just given is in fact only
approximate, both because isospin is not an exact
symmetry, and more importantly because the strong
nuclear interaction between the two nucleons is related to angular
momentum in a
way that mixes different s and l states. That is, s and l are
not constant in time (they do not commute with the Hamiltonian),
and over time a state such as s =1, l =0 may become a state of s
=1, l =2. Parity
is still constant in time so these do not mix with odd l states
(such as s =0, l =1). Therefore the quantum
state of the deuterium is a superposition (a linear
combination) of the s =1, l =0 state and the s =1, l =2 state, even
though the first component is much bigger. Since the total
angular momentum j is also a good quantum
number (it is a constant in time), both components must have
the same j, and therefore j =1. This is the total spin of
the deuterium nucleus.
To summarize, the deuterium nucleus is
antisymmetric in terms of isospin, and has spin 1 and
even (+1) parity. The relative angular momentum of its nucleons l is not well defined,
and the deuterium is a superposition of mostly l
=0 with some l =2.
Magnetic and electric multipoles
In order to find theoretically the deuterium
magnetic
dipole moment \mu, one uses the formula for a nuclear
magnetic moment
- \mu =
- \overrightarrow = g^\overrightarrow + g^\overrightarrow
Since the proton and neutron have different values
for g(l) and g(s), one must separate their contributions. Each gets
half of the deuterium orbital
angular momentum \overrightarrow and spin
\overrightarrow. One arrives at
- \mu =
By using the same identities as
here and using the value g(l)p = 1 in nuclear
magneton units, we arrive at the following result, in nuclear
magneton units
- \mu =
For the s =1, l =0 state j =1 and we get, in
nuclear
magneton units
- \mu = (_p + _n) = 0.879
For the s =1, l =2 state with j =1 we get, in
nuclear
magneton units
- \mu = -(_p + _n) + = 0.310
The measured value of the deuterium magnetic
dipole moment, in nuclear
magneton units, is 0.857. This suggests that the state of the
deuterium is indeed only approximately s =1, l =0 state, and is
actually a linear combination of (mostly) this state with s =1, l
=2 state.
The electric
dipole is zero as
usual.
The measured electric quadropole of the deuterium
is 0.2859 e fm², where e is the proton electric
charge and fm is fermi. While
the order of magnitude is reasonable, since the deuterium radius is
of order of 1 fermi (see below) and its electric
charge is e, the above model does not suffice for its
computation. More specifically, the electric quadropole does not get a
contribution from the l =0 state (which is the dominant one) and
does get a contribution from a term mixing the l =0 and the l =2
states, because the electric quadrupole operator does not commute with angular
momentum. The latter contribution is dominant in the absence of
a pure l =0 contribution, but cannot be calculated without knowing
the exact spatial form of the nucleons wavefunction inside the
deuterium.
Higher magnetic and electric multipole
moments cannot be calculated by the above model, for similar
reasons.
Deuterium radius
see Nuclear sizeThe square root of the average squared radius of
the deuterium, measured experimentally, is \sqrt = 0.96 fermi (=
0.96 fm).
Applications
Deuterium is useful in nuclear fusion reactions, especially in combination with tritium, because of the large reaction rate (or nuclear cross section) and high energy yield of the D-T reaction. There is an even higher-yield D-He3 fusion reaction, though the breakeven point of D-He3 is higher than that of most other fusion reactions; together with the scarcity of He3, this makes it implausible as a practical power source until at least D-T and D-D fusion reactions have been performed on a commercial scale. Unlike protium, deuterium undergoes fusion purely via the strong interaction, making its use for commercial power plausible.In chemistry and biochemistry, deuterium is
used as a non-radioactive isotopic tracer in molecules to study
chemical
reactions and metabolic
pathways, because chemically it behaves similarly to ordinary
hydrogen, but it can be distinguished from ordinary hydrogen by its
mass, using mass
spectrometry or infrared
spectrometry.
Neutron
scattering techniques particularly profit from availability of
deuterated samples: The H and D cross sections are very distinct
and different in sign, which allows contrast variation in such
experiments. Further, a nuisance problem of ordinary hydrogen is
its large incoherent neutron cross section, which is nil for D and
delivers much clearer signals in deuterated samples. Hydrogen
occurs in all materials of organic chemistry and life science, but
cannot be seen by X-ray diffraction methods. Hydrogen can be seen
by neutron diffraction and scattering, which makes neutron
scattering, together with a modern deuteration facility,
indispensable for many studies of macromolecules in biology and
many other areas.
Deuterium is useful in hydrogen nuclear magnetic
resonance spectroscopy (proton NMR).
NMR ordinarily requires compounds of interest to be analyzed as
dissolved in solution. Because of deuterium's nuclear spin
properties which differ from the light hydrogen usually present in
organic molecules, NMR spectra of hydrogen/protium are
highly differentiable from that of deuterium, and in practice
deuterium is not "seen" by an NMR instrument tuned to
light-hydrogen. Deuterated solvents (including heavy water, but
also compounds like deuterated chloroform CDCl3) are therefore
routinely used in NMR spectroscopy, in order to allow only the
light-hydrogen spectra of the compound of interest to be measured,
without solvent-signal interference.
Deuterium can also be used for femtosecond
infrared spectroscopy,
since the mass difference drastically affects the frequency of
molecular vibrations; deuterium-carbon bond vibrations are found in
locations free of other signals.
Measurements of small variations in the natural
abundances of deuterium, along with those of the stable heavy
oxygen isotopes 17O and 18O, are of importance in hydrology, to trace the
geographic origin of Earth's waters. The heavy isotopes of hydrogen
and oxygen in rainwater (so-called meteoric
water) are enriched as a function of the environmental
temperature of the region in which the precipitation falls (and
thus enrichment is related to mean latitude). The relative
enrichment of the heavy isotopes in rainwater (as referenced to
mean ocean water), when plotted against temperature falls
predictably along a line called the
global meteoric water line (GMWL). This plot allows samples of
precipitation-originated water to be identified along with general
information about the climate in which it originated. Evaporative
and other processes in bodies of water, and also ground water
processes, also differentially alter the ratios of heavy hydrogen
and oxygen isotopes in fresh and salt waters, in characteristic and
often regionally-distinctive ways.
The proton and neutron making up deuterium can be
dissociated
through neutral
current interactions with neutrinos. The cross
section for this interaction is comparatively large, and
deuterium was successfully used as a neutrino target in the
Sudbury Neutrino Observatory experiment.
History
Lighter element isotopes suspected
The existence of nonradioactive isotopes of lighter elements had been suspected in studies of neon as early as 1913, and proven by mass spectroscopy of light elements in 1920. The prevailing theory at the time, however, was that the isotopes were due to the existence of differing numbers of "nuclear electrons" in different atoms of an element. It was expected that hydrogen, with a measured average atomic mass very close to 1 u, and a nucleus thought to be composed of a single proton (a known particle), could not contain nuclear electrons, and thus could have no heavy isotopes.Deuterium predicted and finally detected
Deuterium was predicted in 1926 by Walter Russell, using his "spiral" periodic table. It was first detected spectroscopically in late 1931 by Harold Urey, a chemist at Columbia University. Urey's collaborator, Ferdinand Brickwedde, distilled five liters of cryogenically-produced liquid hydrogen to 1 mL of liquid, using the low-temperature physics laboratory that had recently been established at the National Bureau of Standards in Washington, D.C. (now the National Institute of Standards and Technology). This concentrated the fraction of the mass-2 isotope of hydrogen to a degree that made its spectroscopic identification unambiguous; Urey called the isotope "deuterium" from the Greek and Latin words for "two". The amount inferred for normal abundance of this heavy isotope was so small (only about 1 atom in 6400 hydrogen atoms in ocean water) that it had not noticeably affected previous measurements of (average) hydrogen atomic mass. Urey was also able to concentrate water to show partial enrichment of deuterium. Gilbert Newton Lewis prepared the first samples of pure heavy water in 1933. The discovery of deuterium, coming before the discovery of the neutron in 1932, was an experimental shock to theory, and after the neutron was reported, deuterium won Urey the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1934."Heavy water" experiments in World War II
Main Article: Heavy waterShortly before the war, Hans von
Halban and Lew Kowarski
moved their research on neutron moderation from France to England,
smuggling the entire global supply of heavy water (made in Norway)
across in twenty-six steel drums.
During World War
II, Nazi Germany
was known to be conducting experiments using heavy water
as moderator for a nuclear
reactor design. (Heavy water
is water in which the
hydrogen is deuterium.) Such experiments were a source of concern
because they might allow them to produce plutonium for an atomic bomb.
Ultimately, it led to (what seemed to be important at that time)
the Allied
operation called the "Norwegian
heavy water sabotage," the purpose of which was to destroy the
Vemork
deuterium production/enrichment facility in Norway.
After World War II ended, the Allies discovered
that Germany was not putting as much serious effort into the
program as had been previously thought. The Germans had completed
only a small, partly-built experimental reactor (which had been
hidden away). By the end of the war, the Germans did not even have
a fifth the amount of heavy water needed to run the reactor,
partially due to the
Norwegian heavy water sabotage operation. However, even had the
Germans succeeded in getting a reactor operational (as the U.S.
did with a graphite reactor in late 1942), they would
still have been at least several years away from development of an
atomic
bomb with maximal effort. The engineering process, even with
maximal effort and funding, required about two and a half years
(from first critical reactor to bomb) in both the U.S. and U.S.S.R, for
example.
Data
Data at approximately 18 K for D2 (triple
point):
- Density:
-
- Liquid: 162.4 kg/m3
- Gas: 0.452 kg/m3
-
- Solid: 2950 J/(kg·K)
- Gas: 5200 J/(kg·K)
Anti-deuterium
An antideuteron is the antiparticle of the
nucleus of deuterium, consisting of an antiproton and an antineutron. The
antideuteron was first produced in 1965 at the Proton
Synchrotron at CERN and the Alternating Gradient
Synchrotron at
Brookhaven National Laboratory. A complete atom, with a
positron orbiting the
nucleus, would be called antideuterium, but as of 2005 antideuterium has
not yet been created. The symbol for antideuterium is the same as
for deuterium, except with a bar over it.
Pycnodeuterium
Deuterium atoms can be absorbed into a Paladium
(Pd) lattice. They are effectively solidified as an ultrahigh
density deuterium lump (Pycnodeuterium) inside each octahedral
space within the unit cell of the Pd host lattice. The authors
believe this can be used as a nuclear fuel in cold fusion. Although
this mechanism does result in high concentrations of deuterium in
volumes, the reality of actual cold fusion by this mechanism has
not been generally accepted within the scientific community
See also
References
Notes
General references
deuterium in Arabic: ديوتريوم
deuterium in Asturian: Deuteriu
deuterium in Bengali: ডিউটেরিয়াম
deuterium in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Дэўтэр
deuterium in Bosnian: Deuterij
deuterium in Breton: Deuteriom
deuterium in Bulgarian: Деутерий
deuterium in Catalan: Deuteri
deuterium in Czech: Deuterium
deuterium in Danish: Deuterium
deuterium in German: Deuterium
deuterium in Estonian: Deuteerium
deuterium in Spanish: Deuterio
deuterium in Esperanto: Deŭterio
deuterium in Basque: Deuterio
deuterium in Persian: دوتریوم
deuterium in French: Deutérium
deuterium in Korean: 중수소
deuterium in Croatian: Deuterij
deuterium in Indonesian: Deuterium
deuterium in Italian: Deuterio
deuterium in Hebrew: דאוטריום
deuterium in Latvian: Deitērijs
deuterium in Hungarian: Deutérium
deuterium in Malay (macrolanguage):
Deuterium
deuterium in Dutch: Deuterium
deuterium in Japanese: 重水素
deuterium in Norwegian: Deuterium
deuterium in Low German: Deuterium
deuterium in Polish: Deuter
deuterium in Portuguese: Deutério
deuterium in Romanian: Deuteriu
deuterium in Russian: Дейтерий
deuterium in Simple English: Deuterium
deuterium in Slovak: Deutérium
deuterium in Slovenian: Devterij
deuterium in Serbian: Деутеријум
deuterium in Finnish: Deuterium
deuterium in Swedish: Deuterium
deuterium in Thai: ดิวเทอเรียม
deuterium in Turkish: Döteryum
deuterium in Ukrainian: Дейтерій
deuterium in Chinese: 氘