Isotopes of germanium

Germanium (Ge) has five naturally occurring isotopes, 70Ge, 72Ge, 73Ge, 74Ge, and 76Ge. Of these, 76Ge is very slightly radioactive, decaying by double beta decay with a half-life of 1.78 × 1021 years [1] (130 million million times the age of the universe), giving it the distinction of being the nuclide with the longest directly measured half-life (tellurium-128 has a half-life > 1000 times longer, but it has been indirectly measured by decay products in ancient rocks).

Stable 74Ge is the most common isotope, having a natural abundance of approximately 36%. 76Ge is the least common with a natural abundance of approximately 7%.[2] When bombarded with alpha particles, the isotopes 72Ge and 76Ge will generate stable 75As and 77Se, releasing high energy electrons in the process.[3]

At least 27 radioisotopes have also been synthesized ranging in atomic mass from 58 to 89. The most stable of these is 68Ge, decaying by electron capture with a half-life of 270.95 d. It decays to the medically useful positron-emitting isotope 68Ga. (See gallium-68 generator for notes on the source of this isotope, and its medical use). The least stable known germanium stable is 60Ge with a half-life of 30 ms.

While most of germanium's radioisotopes decay by beta decay, 61Ge and 64Ge decay by β+ delayed proton emission.[2] 84Ge through 87Ge also have minor β- delayed neutron emission decay paths.[2]

Standard atomic mass: 72.64(1) u

Table

nuclide
symbol
Z(p) N(n)  
isotopic mass (u)
 
half-life[n 1] decay
mode(s)[4][n 2]
daughter
isotope(s)[n 3]
nuclear
spin
representative
isotopic
composition
(mole fraction)
range of natural
variation
(mole fraction)
excitation energy
58Ge 32 26 57.99101(34)# 2p 56Zn 0+
59Ge 32 27 58.98175(30)# 2p 57Zn 7/2-#
60Ge 32 28 59.97019(25)# 30# ms β+ 60Ga 0+
2p 58Zn
61Ge 32 29 60.96379(32)# 39(12) ms β+, p (80%) 60Zn (3/2-)#
β+ (20%) 61Ga
62Ge 32 30 61.95465(15)# 129(35) ms β+ 62Ga 0+
63Ge 32 31 62.94964(21)# 142(8) ms β+ 63Ga (3/2-)#
64Ge 32 32 63.94165(3) 63.7(25) s β+ 64Ga 0+
65Ge 32 33 64.93944(11) 30.9(5) s β+ (99.99%) 65Ga (3/2)-
β+, p (.01%) 64Zn
66Ge 32 34 65.93384(3) 2.26(5) h β+ 66Ga 0+
67Ge 32 35 66.932734(5) 18.9(3) min β+ 67Ga 1/2-
67m1Ge 18.20(5) keV 13.7(9) µs 5/2-
67m2Ge 751.70(6) keV 110.9(14) ns 9/2+
68Ge[n 4] 32 36 67.928094(7) 270.95(16) d EC 68Ga 0+
69Ge 32 37 68.9279645(14) 39.05(10) h β+ 69Ga 5/2-
69m1Ge 86.765(14) keV 5.1(2) µs 1/2-
69m2Ge 397.944(18) keV 2.81(5) µs 9/2+
70Ge 32 38 69.9242474(11) Stable 0+ 0.2038(18)
71Ge 32 39 70.9249510(11) 11.43(3) d EC 71Ga 1/2-
71mGe 198.367(10) keV 20.40(17) ms IT 71Ge 9/2+
72Ge 32 40 71.9220758(18) Stable 0+ 0.2731(26)
72mGe 691.43(4) keV 444.2(8) ns 0+
73Ge 32 41 72.9234589(18) Stable 9/2+ 0.0776(8)
73m1Ge 13.2845(15) keV 2.92(3) µs 5/2+
73m2Ge 66.726(9) keV 499(11) ms 1/2-
74Ge 32 42 73.9211778(18) Stable 0+ 0.3672(15)
75Ge 32 43 74.9228589(18) 82.78(4) min β- 75As 1/2-
75m1Ge 139.69(3) keV 47.7(5) s IT (99.97%) 75Ge 7/2+
β- 75As
75m2Ge 192.18(7) keV 216(5) ns 5/2+
76Ge[n 5] 32 44 75.9214026(18) 1.78(8)×1021 a[n 6] β-β- 76Se 0+ 0.0783(7)
77Ge 32 45 76.9235486(18) 11.30(1) h β- 77As 7/2+
77mGe 159.70(10) keV 52.9(6) s β- (79%) 77As 1/2-
IT (21%) 77Ge
78Ge 32 46 77.922853(4) 88(1) min β- 78As 0+
79Ge 32 47 78.9254(1) 18.98(3) s β- 79As (1/2)-
79mGe 185.95(4) keV 39.0(10) s β- (96%) 79As (7/2+)#
IT (4%) 79Ge
80Ge 32 48 79.92537(3) 29.5(4) s β- 80As 0+
81Ge 32 49 80.92882(13) 7.6(6) s β- 81As 9/2+#
81mGe 679.13(4) keV 7.6(6) s β- (99%) 81As (1/2+)
IT (1%) 81Ge
82Ge 32 50 81.92955(26) 4.55(5) s β- 82As 0+
83Ge 32 51 82.93462(21)# 1.85(6) s β- 83As (5/2+)#
84Ge 32 52 83.93747(32)# 0.947(11) s β- (89.2%) 84As 0+
β-, n (10.8%) 83As
85Ge 32 53 84.94303(43)# 535(47) ms β- (86%) 85As 5/2+#
β-, n (14%) 84As
86Ge 32 54 85.94649(54)# >150 ns β-, n 85As 0+
β- 86As
87Ge 32 55 86.95251(54)# 0.14# s 5/2+#
88Ge 32 56 87.95691(75)# >=300 ns 0+
89Ge 32 57 88.96383(97)# >150 ns 3/2+#
  1. ^ Bold for isotopes with half-lives longer than the age of the universe (nearly stable)
  2. ^ Abbreviations:
    EC: Electron capture
    IT: Isomeric transition
  3. ^ Bold for stable isotopes
  4. ^ Used to generate 68Ga
  5. ^ Primordial radionuclide
  6. ^ Longest directly measured half-life of all known radioisotopes

Notes

References

  1. ^ A. M. Bakalyarov, A. Ya. Balysh, S. T. Belyaev, V. I. Lebedev, S. V. Zhukov (2003). "Results of the experiment on investigation of Germanium-76 double beta decay". arXiv:hep-ex/0309016 [hep-ex]. 
  2. ^ a b c G. Audi, A. H. Wapstra, C. Thibault, J. Blachot and O. Bersillon (2003). "The NUBASE evaluation of nuclear and decay properties". Nuclear Physics A 729: 3–128. Bibcode 2003NuPhA.729....3A. doi:10.1016/j.nuclphysa.2003.11.001. http://www.nndc.bnl.gov/amdc/nubase/Nubase2003.pdf. 
  3. ^ Via a set of two reactions:
    4He + 72Ge -> 75Se + 1n, 75Se decays by electron capture to 75As with a half-life of 120 days
    76Ge + 1n -> 77Ge, which then undergoes beta decay to 77As with a half-life of 11.3 hours, which in turn undergoes beta decay to 77Se with a half-life of 39 hours
  4. ^ http://www.nucleonica.net/unc.aspx
Isotopes of gallium Isotopes of germanium Isotopes of arsenic
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