Fluorine-19
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Fluorine-19
Fluorine (9F) has 18 known isotopes ranging from to (with the exception of ) and two isomers ( and ). Only fluorine-19 is stable and naturally occurring in more than trace quantities; therefore, fluorine is a monoisotopic and mononuclidic element. The longest-lived radioisotope is ; it has a half-life of . All other fluorine isotopes have half-lives of less than a minute, and most of those less than a second. The least stable known isotope is , whose half-life is , corresponding to a resonance width of . List of isotopes , - , , style="text-align:right" , 9 , style="text-align:right" , 4 , # , , p ?Decay mode shown is energetically allowed, but has not been experimentally observed to occur in this nuclide. , ? , 1/2+# , , , - , , style="text-align:right" , 9 , style="text-align:right" , 5 , , [] , p ?Decay mode shown is energetically allowed, but has not been experimentally observed to occur in this nuclide. , ? , 2− , , , - , , style="t ...
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Isotopes Of Fluorine
Fluorine (9F) has 18 known isotopes ranging from to (with the exception of ) and two isomers ( and ). Only fluorine-19 is stable and naturally occurring in more than trace quantities; therefore, fluorine is a monoisotopic and mononuclidic element. The longest-lived radioisotope is ; it has a half-life of . All other fluorine isotopes have half-lives of less than a minute, and most of those less than a second. The least stable known isotope is , whose half-life is , corresponding to a resonance width of . List of isotopes , - , , style="text-align:right" , 9 , style="text-align:right" , 4 , # , , p ?Decay mode shown is energetically allowed, but has not been experimentally observed to occur in this nuclide. , ? , 1/2+# , , , - , , style="text-align:right" , 9 , style="text-align:right" , 5 , , [] , p ?Decay mode shown is energetically allowed, but has not been experimentally observed to occur in this nuclide. , ? , 2− , , , - , , style="t ...
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Fluorine-19
Fluorine (9F) has 18 known isotopes ranging from to (with the exception of ) and two isomers ( and ). Only fluorine-19 is stable and naturally occurring in more than trace quantities; therefore, fluorine is a monoisotopic and mononuclidic element. The longest-lived radioisotope is ; it has a half-life of . All other fluorine isotopes have half-lives of less than a minute, and most of those less than a second. The least stable known isotope is , whose half-life is , corresponding to a resonance width of . List of isotopes , - , , style="text-align:right" , 9 , style="text-align:right" , 4 , # , , p ?Decay mode shown is energetically allowed, but has not been experimentally observed to occur in this nuclide. , ? , 1/2+# , , , - , , style="text-align:right" , 9 , style="text-align:right" , 5 , , [] , p ?Decay mode shown is energetically allowed, but has not been experimentally observed to occur in this nuclide. , ? , 2− , , , - , , style="t ...
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Fluorine-20
Fluorine (9F) has 18 known isotopes ranging from to (with the exception of ) and two isomers ( and ). Only fluorine-19 is stable and naturally occurring in more than trace quantities; therefore, fluorine is a monoisotopic and mononuclidic element. The longest-lived radioisotope is ; it has a half-life of . All other fluorine isotopes have half-lives of less than a minute, and most of those less than a second. The least stable known isotope is , whose half-life is , corresponding to a resonance width of . List of isotopes , - , , style="text-align:right" , 9 , style="text-align:right" , 4 , # , , p ?Decay mode shown is energetically allowed, but has not been experimentally observed to occur in this nuclide. , ? , 1/2+# , , , - , , style="text-align:right" , 9 , style="text-align:right" , 5 , , [] , p ?Decay mode shown is energetically allowed, but has not been experimentally observed to occur in this nuclide. , ? , 2− , , , - , , style="t ...
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Mononuclidic Element
A mononuclidic element or monotopic element is one of the 21 chemical elements that is found naturally on Earth essentially as a single nuclide (which may, or may not, be a stable nuclide). This single nuclide will have a characteristic atomic mass. Thus, the element's natural isotopic abundance is dominated by one isotope that is either stable or very long-lived. There are 19 elements in the first category (which are both monoisotopic and mononuclidic), and 2 (bismuth and protactinium) in the second category (mononuclidic but not monoisotopic, since they have zero, not one, stable nuclides). A list of the 21 mononuclidic elements is given at the end of this article. Of the 26 ''monoisotopic elements'' that, by definition, have only one stable isotope, there exist 7 (26 minus 19 = 7) which are nevertheless ''not'' considered mononuclidic, due to the presence of a significant fraction of a very long-lived ( primordial) radioisotope occurring in their natural abundance. These ...
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Fluorine-18
Fluorine-18 (18F) is a fluorine radioisotope which is an important source of positrons. It has a mass of 18.0009380(6) u and its half-life is 109.771(20) minutes. It decays by positron emission 96% of the time and electron capture 4% of the time. Both modes of decay yield stable oxygen-18. Natural occurrence is a natural trace radioisotope produced by cosmic ray spallation of atmospheric argon as well as by reaction of protons with natural oxygen: 18O + p → 18F + n.18O">sup>18Oater with high energy protons (typically ~18 MeV). The fluorine produced is in the form of a water solution of 18F.html" ;"title="sup>18F">sup>18F luoride, which is then used in a rapid chemical synthesis of various radio pharmaceuticals. The organic oxygen-18 pharmaceutical molecule is not made before the production of the radiopharmaceutical, as high energy protons destroy such molecules ( radiolysis). Radiopharmaceuticals using fluorine must therefore be synthesized after the fluorine-18 has been p ...
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Fluorine-18
Fluorine-18 (18F) is a fluorine radioisotope which is an important source of positrons. It has a mass of 18.0009380(6) u and its half-life is 109.771(20) minutes. It decays by positron emission 96% of the time and electron capture 4% of the time. Both modes of decay yield stable oxygen-18. Natural occurrence is a natural trace radioisotope produced by cosmic ray spallation of atmospheric argon as well as by reaction of protons with natural oxygen: 18O + p → 18F + n.18O">sup>18Oater with high energy protons (typically ~18 MeV). The fluorine produced is in the form of a water solution of 18F.html" ;"title="sup>18F">sup>18F luoride, which is then used in a rapid chemical synthesis of various radio pharmaceuticals. The organic oxygen-18 pharmaceutical molecule is not made before the production of the radiopharmaceutical, as high energy protons destroy such molecules ( radiolysis). Radiopharmaceuticals using fluorine must therefore be synthesized after the fluorine-18 has been p ...
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Fludeoxyglucose
18F.html" ;"title="sup>18F">sup>18Fluorodeoxyglucose (INN), or fluorodeoxyglucose F 18 (USAN and USP), also commonly called fluorodeoxyglucose and abbreviated 18F.html" ;"title="sup>18F">sup>18FDG, 2- 18F.html" ;"title="sup>18F">sup>18FDG or FDG, is a radiopharmaceutical, specifically a radiotracer, used in the medical imaging modality positron emission tomography (PET). Chemically, it is 2-deoxy-2- 18F.html" ;"title="sup>18F">sup>18Fluoro-D-glucose, a glucose analog, with the positron-emitting radionuclide fluorine-18 substituted for the normal hydroxyl group at the C-2 position in the glucose molecule. The uptake of 18F.html" ;"title="sup>18F">sup>18FDG by tissues is a marker for the tissue uptake of glucose, which in turn is closely correlated with certain types of tissue metabolism. After 18F.html" ;"title="sup>18F">sup>18FDG is injected into a patient, a PET scanner can form two-dimensional or three-dimensional images of the distribution of 18F.html" ;"title="sup>18F"> ...
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Nuclear Isomer
A nuclear isomer is a metastable state of an atomic nucleus, in which one or more nucleons (protons or neutrons) occupy excited state, higher energy levels than in the ground state of the same nucleus. "Metastable" describes nuclei whose excited states have Half-life, half-lives 100 to 1000 times longer than the half-lives of the excited nuclear states that decay with a "prompt" half life (ordinarily on the order of 10−12 seconds). The term "metastable" is usually restricted to isomers with half-lives of 10−9 seconds or longer. Some references recommend 5 × 10−9 seconds to distinguish the metastable half life from the normal "prompt" Induced gamma emission, gamma-emission half-life. Occasionally the half-lives are far longer than this and can last minutes, hours, or years. For example, the Isotopes of tantalum#Tantalum-180m, nuclear isomer survives so long (at least 1015 years) that it has never been observed to decay spontaneously. The half-life of a nuclear isomer can eve ...
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Mean Lifetime
A quantity is subject to exponential decay if it decreases at a rate Proportionality (mathematics), proportional to its current value. Symbolically, this process can be expressed by the following differential equation, where is the quantity and (lambda) is a positive rate called the exponential decay constant, disintegration constant, rate constant, or transformation constant: :\frac = -\lambda N. The solution to this equation (see #Solution_of_the_differential_equation, derivation below) is: :N(t) = N_0 e^, where is the quantity at time , is the initial quantity, that is, the quantity at time . Measuring rates of decay Mean lifetime If the decaying quantity, ''N''(''t''), is the number of discrete elements in a certain set (mathematics), set, it is possible to compute the average length of time that an element remains in the set. This is called the mean lifetime (or simply the lifetime), where the exponential time constant, \tau, relates to the decay rate constant, ...
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Specific Activity
Specific activity is the activity per unit mass of a radionuclide and is a physical property of that radionuclide. Activity is a quantity (for which the SI unit is the becquerel) related to radioactivity, and is defined as the number of radioactive transformations per second that occur in a particular radionuclide. The unit of activity is the becquerel (Bq), which is defined as one radioactive decay per second. The older, non-SI unit of activity is the curie (Ci), which is radioactive decay per second. Another unit of activity is the Rutherford, which is defined as radioactive decay per second. Since the probability of radioactive decay for a given radionuclide within a set time interval is fixed (with some slight exceptions, see changing decay rates), the number of decays that occur in a given time of a given mass (and hence a specific number of atoms) of that radionuclide is also a fixed (ignoring statistical fluctuations). Thus, specific activity is defined as the acti ...
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Fluorine-19 NMR
Fluorine-19 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (fluorine NMR or 19F NMR) is an analytical technique used to detect and identify fluorine-containing compounds. 19F is an important nucleus for NMR spectroscopy because of its receptivity and large chemical shift dispersion, which is greater than that for proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Operational details 19F has a nuclear spin (I) of and a high gyromagnetic ratio. Consequently, this isotope is highly responsive to NMR measurements. Furthermore, 19F comprises 100% of naturally occurring fluorine. The only other highly sensitive spin NMR-active nuclei that are monoisotopic (or nearly so) are 1H and 31P. Indeed, the 19F nucleus is the third most receptive NMR nucleus, after the 3H nucleus and 1H nucleus. The 19F NMR chemical shifts span a range of ''ca.'' 800 ppm. For ''organo''fluorine compounds the range is narrower, being ''ca.'' -50 to -70 ppm (for CF3 groups) to -200 to -220 ppm (for CH2F groups). Th ...
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