An extended periodic table theorizes about chemical elements beyond those currently known and proven. The element with the highest atomic number known is oganesson ( Z = 118), which completes the seventh period (row) in the periodic table. All elements in the eighth period and beyond thus remain purely hypothetical.
Elements beyond 118 would be placed in additional periods when discovered, laid out (as with the existing periods) to illustrate periodically recurring trends in the properties of the elements. Any additional periods are expected to contain more elements than the seventh period, as they are calculated to have an additional so-called g-block, containing at least 18 elements with partially filled g-atomic orbital in each period. An eight-period table containing this block was suggested by Glenn T. Seaborg in 1969. The first element of the g-block may have atomic number 121, and thus would have the systematic name unbiunium. Despite many searches, no elements in this region have been synthesized or discovered in nature.Unbibium was claimed to exist naturally in April 2008, but this claim was widely believed to be erroneous.
According to the orbital approximation in quantum mechanical descriptions of atomic structure, the g-block would correspond to elements with partially filled g-orbitals, but spin–orbit coupling effects reduce the validity of the orbital approximation substantially for elements of high atomic number. Seaborg's version of the extended period had the heavier elements following the pattern set by lighter elements, as it did not take into account relativistic effects. Models that take relativistic effects into account predict that the pattern will be broken. Pekka Pyykkö and Burkhard Fricke used computer modeling to calculate the positions of elements up to Z = 172, and found that several were displaced from the Madelung rule. As a result of uncertainty and variability in predictions of chemical and physical properties of elements beyond 120, there is currently no consensus on their placement in the extended periodic table.
Elements in this region are likely to be highly unstable with respect to radioactive decay and undergo alpha decay or spontaneous fission with extremely short half-life, though unbihexium is hypothesized to be within an island of stability that is resistant to fission but not to alpha decay. Other islands of stability beyond the known elements may also be possible, including one theorised around element 164, though the extent of stabilizing effects from closed nuclear shells is uncertain. It is not clear how many elements beyond the expected island of stability are physically possible, whether period 8 is complete, or if there is a period 9. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) defines an element to exist if its lifetime is longer than 10−14 seconds (0.01 picoseconds, or 10 femtoseconds), which is the time it takes for the nucleus to form an electron cloud.
As early as 1940, it was noted that a simplistic interpretation of the relativistic Dirac equation runs into problems with electron orbitals at Z > 1/α ≈ 137.036 (the reciprocal of the fine-structure constant), suggesting that neutral atoms cannot exist beyond element 137, and that a periodic table of elements based on electron orbitals therefore breaks down at this point. On the other hand, a more rigorous analysis calculates the analogous limit to be Z ≈ 168–172 where the 1s subshell dives into the Dirac sea, and that it is instead not neutral atoms that cannot exist beyond this point, but bare nuclei, thus posing no obstacle to the further extension of the periodic system. Atoms beyond this critical atomic number are called supercritical atoms.
The first predictions on properties of undiscovered superheavy elements were made in 1957, when the concept of nuclear shells was first explored and an island of stability was theorized to exist around element 126. In 1967, more rigorous calculations were performed, and the island of stability was theorized to be centered at the then-undiscovered flerovium (element 114); this and other subsequent studies motivated many researchers to search for superheavy elements in nature or attempt to synthesize them at accelerators. Many searches for superheavy elements were conducted in the 1970s, all with negative results. , synthesis has been attempted for every element up to and including unbiseptium ( Z = 127), except unbitrium ( Z = 123), with the heaviest successfully synthesized element being oganesson in 2002 and the most recent discovery being that of tennessine in 2010.
As some superheavy elements were predicted to lie beyond the seven-period periodic table, an additional eighth period containing these elements was first proposed by Glenn T. Seaborg in 1969. This model continued the pattern in established elements and introduced a new g-block and superactinide series beginning at element 121, raising the number of elements in period 8 compared to known periods. These early calculations failed to consider relativistic effects that break down periodic trends and render simple extrapolation impossible, however. In 1971, Fricke calculated the periodic table up to Z = 172, and discovered that some elements indeed had different properties that break the established pattern, and a 2010 calculation by Pekka Pyykkö also noted that several elements might behave differently than expected. It is unknown how far the periodic table might extend beyond the known 118 elements, as heavier elements are predicted to be increasingly unstable. Glenn T. Seaborg suggested that practically speaking, the end of the periodic table might come as early as around Z = 120 due to nuclear instability.
All hypothetical elements are given an International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) systematic element name, for use until the element has been discovered, confirmed, and an official name is approved. These names are typically not used in the literature, and the elements are instead referred to by their atomic numbers; hence, element 164 is usually not called "unhexquadium" or "Uhq" (the systematic name and symbol), but rather "element 164" with symbol "164", "(164)", or "E164".
Fricke et al.'s format is more focused on formal electron configurations than likely chemical behaviour. They place elements 156–164 in groups 4–12 because formally their configurations should be 7d2 through 7d10. However, they differ from the previous d-elements in that the 8s shell is not available for chemical bonding: instead, the 9s shell is. Thus element 164 with 7d109s0 is noted by Fricke et al. to be analogous to palladium with 4d105s0, and they consider elements 157–172 to have chemical analogies to groups 3–18 (though they are ambivalent on whether elements 165 and 166 are more like group 1 and 2 elements or more like group 11 and 12 elements, respectively). Thus, elements 157–164 are placed in their table in a group that the authors do not think is chemically most analogous.
158
Kulsha suggested two ways to deal with elements 121–156, that lack precise analogues among earlier elements. In his first form (2011, after Pyykkö's paper was published), elements 121–138 and 139–156 are placed as two separate rows (together called "ultransition elements"), related by the addition of a 5g18 subshell into the core, as according to Pyykkö's calculations of oxidation states, they should, respectively, mimic lanthanides and actinides. In his second suggestion (2016), elements 121–142 form a g-block (as they have 5g activity), while elements 143–156 form an f-block placed under actinium through nobelium.
Thus, period 8 emerges with 54 elements, and the next noble element after 118 is 172.
No atoms were identified, leading to a limiting cross section of 300 nb. Later calculations suggest that the cross section of the 3n reaction (which would result in 119 and three neutrons as products) would actually be six hundred thousand times lower than this upper bound, at 0.5 pb.
From April to September 2012, an attempt to synthesize the isotopes 119 and 119 was made by bombarding a target of berkelium-249 with titanium-50 at the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Darmstadt, Germany. Modern alchemy: Turning a line, The Economist, May 12, 2012. Superheavy Element Search Campaign at TASCA. J. Khuyagbaatar Based on the theoretically predicted cross section, it was expected that an ununennium atom would be synthesized within five months of the beginning of the experiment. Moreover, as berkelium-249 decays to californium-249 (the next element) with a short half-life of 327 days, this allowed elements 119 and 120 to be searched for simultaneously.
The experiment was originally planned to continue to November 2012, but was stopped early to make use of the Bk target to confirm the synthesis of tennessine (thus changing the projectiles to Ca). This reaction of Bk + Ti was predicted to be the most favorable practical reaction for formation of element 119, as it is rather asymmetrical, though also somewhat cold. (Es + Ca would be superior, but preparing milligram quantities of Es for a target is difficult.) Nevertheless, the necessary change from the "silver bullet" Ca to Ti divides the expected yield of element 119 by about twenty, as the yield is strongly dependent on the asymmetry of the fusion reaction.
Due to the predicted short half-lives, the GSI team used new "fast" electronics capable of registering decay events within microseconds. No atoms of element 119 were identified, implying a limiting cross section of 70 fb. The predicted actual cross section is around 40 fb, which is at the limits of current technology.
The team at RIKEN in Wakō, Japan began bombarding curium-248 targets with a vanadium-51 beam in January 2018 to search for element 119. Curium was chosen as a target, rather than heavier berkelium or californium, as these heavier targets are difficult to prepare. The Cm targets were provided by Oak Ridge National Laboratory. RIKEN developed a high-intensity vanadium beam. The experiment began at a cyclotron while RIKEN upgraded its linear accelerators; the upgrade was completed in 2020. Bombardment may be continued with both machines until the first event is observed; the experiment is currently running intermittently for at least 100 days a year. The RIKEN team's efforts are being financed by the Emperor of Japan. The team at the JINR plans to attempt synthesis of element 119 in the future, probably via the Am + Cr reaction, but a precise timeframe has not been publicly released.
The Russian team planned to upgrade their facilities before attempting the reaction again.
In April 2007, the team at the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Darmstadt, Germany, attempted to create element 120 using uranium-238 and nickel-64:
No atoms were detected, providing a limit of 1.6 pb for the cross section at the energy provided. The GSI repeated the experiment with higher sensitivity in three separate runs in April–May 2007, January–March 2008, and September–October 2008, all with negative results, reaching a cross section limit of 90 fb.
In June–July 2010, and again in 2011, after upgrading their equipment to allow the use of more radioactive targets, scientists at the GSI attempted the more asymmetrical fusion reaction:
It was expected that the change in reaction would quintuple the probability of synthesizing element 120, as the yield of such reactions is strongly dependent on their asymmetry. Three correlated signals were observed that matched the predicted alpha decay energies of 299120 and its decay product 295Og, as well as the experimentally known decay energy of its granddaughter 291livermorium. However, the lifetimes of these possible decays were much longer than expected, and the results could not be confirmed.
In August–October 2011, a different team at the GSI using the TASCA facility tried a new, even more asymmetrical reaction:
This was also tried unsuccessfully the next year during the aforementioned attempt to make element 119 in the 249Bk+50Ti reaction, as 249Bk decays to 249Cf. Because of its asymmetry, the reaction between 249Cf and 50Ti was predicted to be the most favorable practical reaction for synthesizing unbinilium, although it is also somewhat cold. No unbinilium atoms were identified, implying a limiting cross-section of 200 fb. Jens Volker Kratz predicted the actual maximum cross-section for producing element 120 by any of these reactions to be around 0.1 fb; in comparison, the world record for the smallest cross section of a successful reaction was 30 fb for the reaction 209Bi(70Zn,n)278nihonium, and Kratz predicted a maximum cross-section of 20 fb for producing the neighbouring element 119. If these predictions are accurate, then synthesizing element 119 would be at the limits of current technology, and synthesizing element 120 would require new methods.
In May 2021, the JINR announced plans to investigate the 249Cf+50Ti reaction in their new facility. However, the 249Cf target would have had to be made by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the United States, and after the Russian invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022, collaboration between the JINR and other institutes completely ceased due to sanctions. Consequently, the JINR now plans to try the 248Cm+54Cr reaction instead. A preparatory experiment for the use of 54Cr projectiles was conducted in late 2023, successfully synthesising 288Lv in the 238U+54Cr reaction, and the hope is for experiments to synthesise element 120 to begin by 2025.
Starting from 2022, plans have also been made to use 88-inch cyclotron in the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) in Berkeley, California, United States to attempt to make new elements using 50Ti projectiles. First, the 244Pu+50Ti reaction was tested, successfully creating two atoms of 290Lv in 2024. Since this was successful, an attempt to make element 120 in the 249Cf+50Ti reaction is planned to begin in 2025. The Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), which previously collaborated with the JINR, will collaborate with the LBNL on this project.
These experiments were motivated by early predictions on the existence of an island of stability at N = 184 and Z > 120. No atoms were detected and a yield limit of 5 nb (5,000 pb) was measured. Current results (see flerovium) have shown that the sensitivity of these experiments were too low by at least 3 orders of magnitude.
In 2000, the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI) Helmholtz Center for Heavy Ion Research performed a very similar experiment with much higher sensitivity:
These results indicate that the synthesis of such heavier elements remains a significant challenge and further improvements of beam intensity and experimental efficiency is required. The sensitivity should be increased to 1 fb in the future for better quality results.
Another unsuccessful attempt to synthesize element 122 was carried out in 1978 at the GSI Helmholtz Center, where a natural erbium target was bombarded with xenon-136 ions:
In particular, the reaction between 170Er and 136Xe was expected to yield alpha-emitters with half-lives of microseconds that would decay down to isotopes of flerovium with half-lives perhaps increasing up to several hours, as flerovium is predicted to lie near the center of the island of stability. After twelve hours of irradiation, nothing was found in this reaction. Following a similar unsuccessful attempt to synthesize element 121 from 238U and 65Cu, it was concluded that half-lives of superheavy nuclei must be less than one microsecond or the cross sections are very small. More recent research into synthesis of superheavy elements suggests that both conclusions are true. The two attempts in the 1970s to synthesize element 122 were both propelled by the research investigating whether superheavy elements could potentially be naturally occurring.
Several experiments studying the fission characteristics of various superheavy compound nuclei such as 306122* were performed between 2000 and 2004 at the Flerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions. Two nuclear reactions were used, namely 248Cm + 58Fe and 242Pu + 64Ni. The results reveal how superheavy nuclei fission predominantly by expelling closed shell nuclei such as 132Sn ( Z = 50, N = 82). It was also found that the yield for the fusion-fission pathway was similar between 48Ca and 58Fe projectiles, suggesting a possible future use of 58Fe projectiles in superheavy element formation.see Flerov lab annual reports 2000–2004 inclusive http://www1.jinr.ru/Reports/Reports_eng_arh.html
The team reported that they had been able to identify compound nuclei fissioning with half-lives > 10−18 s. This result suggests a strong stabilizing effect at Z = 124 and points to the next proton shell at Z > 120, not at Z = 114 as previously thought. A compound nucleus is a loose combination of that have not arranged themselves into nuclear shells yet. It has no internal structure and is held together only by the collision forces between the target and projectile nuclei. It is estimated that it requires around 10−14 s for the nucleons to arrange themselves into nuclear shells, at which point the compound nucleus becomes a nuclide, and this number is used by IUPAC as the minimum half-life a claimed isotope must have to potentially be recognised as being discovered. Thus, the GANIL experiments do not count as a discovery of element 124.
The fission of the compound nucleus 312124 was also studied in 2006 at the tandem ALPI heavy-ion accelerator at the Laboratori Nazionali di Legnaro (Legnaro National Laboratories) in Italy:
Similarly to previous experiments conducted at the JINR (Joint Institute for Nuclear Research), fission product clustered around doubly magic nuclei such as 132Sn ( Z = 50, N = 82), revealing a tendency for superheavy nuclei to expel such doubly magic nuclei in fission. The average number of neutrons per fission from the 312124 compound nucleus (relative to lighter systems) was also found to increase, confirming that the trend of heavier nuclei emitting more neutrons during fission continues into the superheavy mass region.
No atoms were detected, and a cross section limit of 5 nb was determined. This experiment was motivated by the possibility of greater stability for nuclei around Z ~ 126 and N ~ 184, though more recent research suggests the island of stability may instead lie at a lower atomic number (such as copernicium, Z = 112), and the synthesis of heavier elements such as element 125 will require more sensitive experiments.
decay energy (13–15 MeV) alpha particles were observed and taken as possible evidence for the synthesis of element 126. Subsequent unsuccessful experiments with higher sensitivity suggest that the 10 mb sensitivity of this experiment was too low; hence, the formation of element 126 nuclei in this reaction is highly unlikely.
On April 24, 2008, a group led by Amnon Marinov at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem claimed to have found single atoms of 292122 in naturally occurring thorium deposits at an abundance of between 10−11 and 10−12 relative to thorium. The claim of Marinov et al. was criticized by a part of the scientific community. Marinov claimed that he had submitted the article to the journals Nature and Nature Physics but both turned it down without sending it for peer review.Royal Society of Chemistry, " Heaviest element claim criticised ", Chemical World. The 292122 atoms were claimed to be superdeformation or hyperdeformation nuclear isomer, with a half-life of at least 100 million years.
A criticism of the technique, previously used in purportedly identifying lighter thorium isotopes by mass spectrometry, was published in Physical Review C in 2008. A rebuttal by the Marinov group was published in Physical Review C after the published comment.
A repeat of the thorium experiment using the superior method of Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) failed to confirm the results, despite a 100-fold better sensitivity. This result throws considerable doubt on the results of the Marinov collaboration with regard to their claims of long-lived isotopes of thorium, roentgenium and element 122. It is still possible that traces of unbibium might only exist in some thorium samples, although this is unlikely.
The possible extent of primordial superheavy elements on Earth today is uncertain. Even if they are confirmed to have caused the radiation damage long ago, they might now have decayed to mere traces, or even be completely gone. It is also uncertain if such superheavy nuclei may be produced naturally at all, as spontaneous fission is expected to terminate the r-process responsible for heavy element formation between mass number 270 and 290, well before elements beyond 120 may be formed.
A recent hypothesis tries to explain the spectrum of Przybylski's Star by naturally occurring flerovium and element 120.Archived at Ghostarchive and the
In the first few superactinides, the binding energies of the added electrons are predicted to be small enough that they can lose all their valence electrons; for example, unbihexium (element 126) could easily form a +8 oxidation state, and even higher oxidation states for the next few elements may be possible. Element 126 is also predicted to display a variety of other : recent calculations have suggested a stable Fluoride 126F may be possible, resulting from a bonding interaction between the 5g Atomic orbital on element 126 and the 2p-orbital orbital on fluorine. Other predicted oxidation states include +2, +4, and +6; +4 is expected to be the most usual oxidation state of unbihexium. The superactinides from unbipentium (element 125) to unbiennium (element 129) are predicted to exhibit a +6 oxidation state and form hexafluorides, though 125F and 126F are predicted to be relatively weakly bound. The bond dissociation energies are expected to greatly increase at element 127 and even more so at element 129. This suggests a shift from strong ionic character in fluorides of element 125 to more covalent character, involving the 8p orbital, in fluorides of element 129. The bonding in these superactinide hexafluorides is mostly between the highest 8p subshell of the superactinide and the 2p subshell of fluorine, unlike how uranium uses its 5f and 6d orbitals for bonding in uranium hexafluoride.
Despite the ability of early superactinides to reach high oxidation states, it has been calculated that the 5g electrons will be most difficult to ionize; the 125 and 126 ions are expected to bear a 5g configuration, similar to the 5f configuration of the Np ion. Similar behavior is observed in the low chemical activity of the 4f electrons in ; this is a consequence of the 5g orbitals being small and deeply buried in the electron cloud. The presence of electrons in g-orbitals, which do not exist in the ground state electron configuration of any currently known element, should allow presently unknown hybrid orbitals to form and influence the chemistry of the superactinides in new ways, although the absence of g electrons in known elements makes predicting superactinide chemistry more difficult.
Similarly to the lanthanide and actinide contractions, there should be a superactinide contraction in the superactinide series where the ionic radius of the superactinides are smaller than expected. In the , the contraction is about 4.4 pm per element; in the , it is about 3 pm per element. The contraction is larger in the lanthanides than in the actinides due to the greater localization of the 4f wave function as compared to the 5f wave function. Comparisons with the wave functions of the outer electrons of the lanthanides, actinides, and superactinides lead to a prediction of a contraction of about 2 pm per element in the superactinides; although this is smaller than the contractions in the lanthanides and actinides, its total effect is larger due to the fact that 32 electrons are filled in the deeply buried 5g and 6f shells, instead of just 14 electrons being filled in the 4f and 5f shells in the lanthanides and actinides, respectively.
Pekka Pyykkö divides these superactinides into three series: a 5g series (elements 121 to 138), an 8p1/2 series (elements 139 to 140), and a 6f series (elements 141 to 155), also noting that there would be a great deal of overlapping between energy levels and that the 6f, 7d, or 8p1/2 orbitals could well also be occupied in the early superactinide atoms or ions. He also expects that they would behave more like "superlanthanides", in the sense that the 5g electrons would mostly be chemically inactive, similarly to how only one or two 4f electrons in each lanthanide are ever ionized in chemical compounds. He also predicted that the possible oxidation states of the superactinides might rise very high in the 6f series, to values such as +12 in element 148.
Andrey Kulsha has called the elements 121 to 156 "ultransition" elements and has proposed to split them into two series of eighteen each, one from elements 121 to 138 and another from elements 139 to 156. The first would be analogous to the lanthanides, with oxidation states mainly ranging from +4 to +6, as the filling of the 5g shell dominates and neighbouring elements are very similar to each other, creating an analogy to uranium, neptunium, and plutonium. The second would be analogous to the actinides: at the beginning (around elements in the 140s) very high oxidation states would be expected as the 6f shell rises above the 7d one, but after that the typical oxidation states would lower and in elements in the 150s onwards the 8p electrons would stop being chemically active. Because the two rows are separated by the addition of a complete 5g subshell, they could be considered analogues of each other as well.
As an example from the late superactinides, element 156 is expected to exhibit mainly the +2 oxidation state, on account of its electron configuration with easily removed 7d electrons over a stable Og5g6f8s8p core. It can thus be considered a heavier congener of nobelium, which likewise has a pair of easily removed 7s electrons over a stable Rn5f core, and is usually in the +2 state (strong oxidisers are required to obtain nobelium in the +3 state). Its first ionization energy should be about 400 kJ/mol and its metallic radius approximately 170 picometers. With a relative atomic mass of around 445 Da, it should be a very heavy metal with a density of around 26 g/cm3.
The noble metals of this series of transition metals are not expected to be as noble as their lighter homologues, due to the absence of an outer s shell for shielding and also because the 7d shell is strongly split into two subshells due to relativistic effects. This causes the first ionization energies of the 7d transition metals to be smaller than those of their lighter congeners.
Theoretical interest in the chemistry of unhexquadium is largely motivated by theoretical predictions that it, especially the isotopes 472164 and 482164 (with 164 and 308 or 318 ), would be at the center of a hypothetical second island of stability (the first being centered on copernicium, particularly the isotopes 291Cn, 293Cn, and 296Cn which are expected to have half-lives of centuries or millennia).
Calculations predict that the 7d electrons of element 164 (unhexquadium) should participate very readily in chemical reactions, so that it should be able to show stable +6 and +4 oxidation states in addition to the normal +2 state in with strong . Element 164 should thus be able to form compounds like 164(carbonyl)4, 164(PF3)4 (both tetrahedral like the corresponding palladium compounds), and (linear), which is very different behavior from that of lead, which element 164 would be a heavier homologue of if not for relativistic effects. Nevertheless, the divalent state would be the main one in aqueous solution (although the +4 and +6 states would be possible with stronger ligands), and unhexquadium(II) should behave more similarly to lead than unhexquadium(IV) and unhexquadium(VI).
Element 164 is expected to be a soft Lewis acid and have Ahrlands softness parameter close to 4 electronvolt. It should be at most moderately reactive, having a first ionization energy that should be around 685 kJ/mol, comparable to that of molybdenum. Due to the lanthanide, actinide, and superactinide contractions, element 164 should have a metallic radius of only 158 picometer, very close to that of the much lighter magnesium, despite its expected atomic weight of around , which is about 19.5 times the atomic weight of magnesium. This small radius and high weight cause it to be expected to have an extremely high density of around 46 g·cm−3, over twice that of osmium, currently the most dense element known, at 22.61 g·cm−3; element 164 should be the second most dense element in the first 172 elements in the periodic table, with only its neighbor unhextrium (element 163) being more dense (at 47 g·cm−3). Metallic element 164 should have a very large cohesive energy (enthalpy of crystallization) due to its Covalent bond bonds, most probably resulting in a high melting point. In the metallic state, element 164 should be quite noble and analogous to palladium and platinum. Fricke et al. suggested some formal similarities to oganesson, as both elements have closed-shell configurations and similar ionisation energies, although they note that while oganesson would be a very bad noble gas, element 164 would be a good noble metal.
Elements 165 (unhexpentium) and 166 (unhexhexium), the last two 7d metals, should behave similarly to alkali metal and alkaline earth metals when in the +1 and +2 oxidation states, respectively. The 9s electrons should have ionization energies comparable to those of the 3s electrons of sodium and magnesium, due to relativistic effects causing the 9s electrons to be much more strongly bound than non-relativistic calculations would predict. Elements 165 and 166 should normally exhibit the +1 and +2 oxidation states, respectively, although the ionization energies of the 7d electrons are low enough to allow higher oxidation states like +3 for element 165. The oxidation state +4 for element 166 is less likely, creating a situation similar to the lighter elements in groups 11 and 12 (particularly gold and mercury). As with mercury but not copernicium, ionization of element 166 to 1662+ is expected to result in a 7d10 configuration corresponding to the loss of the s-electrons but not the d-electrons, making it more analogous to the lighter "less relativistic" group 12 elements zinc, cadmium, and mercury.
Because of some analogy of elements 165–172 to periods 2 and 3, Fricke et al. considered them to form a ninth period of the periodic table, while the eighth period was taken by them to end at the noble metal element 164. This ninth period would be similar to the second and third period in having no transition metals. That being said, the analogy is incomplete for elements 165 and 166; although they do start a new s-shell (9s), this is above a d-shell, making them chemically more similar to groups 11 and 12.
In element 173 (unsepttrium), the outermost electron might enter the 6g7/2, 9p3/2, or 10s subshells. Because spin–orbit interactions would create a very large energy gap between these and the 8p3/2 subshell, this outermost electron is expected to be very loosely bound and very easily lost to form a 173+ cation. As a result, element 173 is expected to behave chemically like an alkali metal, and one that might be far more reactive than even caesium (francium and element 119 being less reactive than caesium due to relativistic effects):
Element 184 (unoctquadium) was significantly targeted in early predictions, as it was originally speculated that 184 would be a proton magic number: it is predicted to have an electron configuration of 172 6g5 7f4 8d3, with at least the 7f and 8d electrons chemically active. Its chemical behaviour is expected to be similar to uranium and neptunium, as further ionisation past the +6 state (corresponding to removal of the 6g electrons) is likely to be unprofitable; the +4 state should be most common in aqueous solution, with +5 and +6 reachable in solid compounds.
where Z is the atomic number, and α is the fine-structure constant, a measure of the strength of electromagnetic interactions. Under this approximation, any element with an atomic number of greater than 137 would require 1s electrons to be traveling faster than c, the speed of light. Hence, the non-relativistic Bohr model is inaccurate when applied to such an element.
where m is the rest mass of the electron. For Z > 137, the wave function of the Dirac ground state is oscillatory, rather than bound, and there is no gap between the positive and negative energy spectra, as in the Klein paradox. More accurate calculations taking into account the effects of the finite size of the nucleus indicate that the binding energy first exceeds 2 mc2 for Z > Zcr probably between 168 and 172. For Z > Zcr, if the innermost orbital (1s) is not filled, the electric field of the nucleus will pair production, resulting in the spontaneous emission of a positron., and references therein This diving of the 1s subshell into the negative continuum has often been taken to constitute an "end" to the periodic table, but in fact it does not impose such a limit, as such resonances can be interpreted as . Nonetheless, the accurate description of such states in a multi-electron system, needed to extend calculations and the periodic table past Zcr ≈ 172, are still open problems.
Atoms with atomic numbers above Zcr ≈ 172 have been termed supercritical atoms. Supercritical atoms cannot be totally ionised because their 1s subshell would be filled by spontaneous pair creation in which an electron-positron pair is created from the negative continuum, with the electron being bound and the positron escaping. However, the strong field around the atomic nucleus is restricted to a very small region of space, so that the Pauli exclusion principle forbids further spontaneous pair creation once the subshells that have dived into the negative continuum are filled. Elements 173–184 have been termed weakly supercritical atoms as for them only the 1s shell has dived into the negative continuum; the 2p1/2 shell is expected to join around element 185 and the 2s shell around element 245. Experiments have so far not succeeded in detecting spontaneous pair creation from assembling supercritical charges through the collision of heavy nuclei (e.g. colliding lead with uranium to momentarily give an effective Z of 174; uranium with uranium gives effective Z = 184 and uranium with californium gives effective Z = 190).
Even though passing Zcr does not mean elements can no longer exist, the increasing concentration of the 1s density close to the nucleus would likely make these electrons more vulnerable to electron capture as Zcr is approached. For such heavy elements, these 1s electrons would likely spend a significant fraction of time so close to the nucleus that they are actually inside it. This may pose another limit to the periodic table.
Because of the factor of m, become supercritical at a much larger atomic number of around 2200, as are about 207 times as heavy as electrons.
Calculations published in 2020, suggest stability of up-down quark matter (udQM) nuggets against conventional nuclei beyond A ~ 266, and also show that udQM nuggets become supercritical earlier ( Zcr ~ 163, A ~ 609) than conventional nuclei ( Zcr ~ 177, A ~ 480).
Calculations according to the Hartree–Fock–Bogoliubov method using the non-relativistic Skyrme interaction have proposed Z = 126 as a closed proton shell. In this region of the periodic table, N = 184, N = 196, and N = 228 have been suggested as closed neutron shells. Therefore, the isotopes of most interest are 310126, 322126, and 354126, for these might be considerably longer-lived than other isotopes. Element 126, having a magic number of , is predicted to be more stable than other elements in this region, and may have with very long half-life. It is also possible that the island of stability is instead centered at 306unbibium, which may be spherical and doubly magic. Probably, the island of stability occurs around Z = 114–126 and N = 184, with lifetimes probably around hours to days. Beyond the shell closure at N = 184, spontaneous fission lifetimes should drastically drop below 10−15 seconds – too short for a nucleus to obtain an electron cloud and participate in any chemistry. That being said, such lifetimes are very model-dependent, and predictions range across many orders of magnitude.
Taking nuclear deformation and relativistic effects into account, an analysis of single-particle levels predicts new magic numbers for superheavy nuclei at Z = 126, 138, 154, and 164 and N = 228, 308, and 318. Therefore, in addition to the island of stability centered at 291Cn, 293Cn, and 298Fl, further islands of stability may exist around the doubly magic 354126 as well as 472164 or 482164. These nuclei are predicted to be beta-stable and decay by alpha emission or spontaneous fission with relatively long half-lives, and confer additional stability on neighboring N = 228 and elements 152–168, respectively. On the other hand, the same analysis suggests that proton shell closures may be relatively weak or even nonexistent in some cases such as 354126, meaning that such nuclei might not be doubly magic and stability will instead be primarily determined by strong neutron shell closures. Additionally, due to the enormously greater forces of electromagnetic repulsion that must be overcome by the strong force at the second island ( Z = 164), it is possible that nuclei around this region only exist as resonances and cannot stay together for a meaningful amount of time. It is also possible that some of the superactinides between these series may not actually exist because they are too far from both islands, in which case the periodic table might end around Z = 130. The area of elements 121–156 where periodicity is in abeyance is quite similar to the gap between the two islands.
Beyond element 164, the fissility line defining the limit of stability with respect to spontaneous fission may converge with the neutron drip line, posing a limit to the existence of heavier elements. Nevertheless, further magic numbers have been predicted at Z = 210, 274, and 354 and N = 308, 406, 524, 644, and 772, with two beta-stable doubly magic nuclei found at 616210 and 798274; the same calculation method reproduced the predictions for 298Fl and 472164. (The doubly magic nuclei predicted for Z = 354 are beta-unstable, with 998354 being neutron-deficient and 1126354 being neutron-rich.) Although additional stability toward alpha decay and fission are predicted for 616210 and 798274, with half-lives up to hundreds of microseconds for 616210, there will not exist islands of stability as significant as those predicted at Z = 114 and 164. As the existence of superheavy elements is very strongly dependent on stabilizing effects from closed shells, nuclear instability and fission will likely determine the end of the periodic table beyond these islands of stability.
The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) defines an element to exist if its lifetime is longer than 10−14 seconds, which is the time it takes for the nucleus to form an electron cloud. However, a nuclide is generally considered to exist if its lifetime is longer than about 10−22 seconds, which is the time it takes for nuclear structure to form. Consequently, it is possible that some Z values can only be realised in nuclides and that the corresponding elements do not exist.
It is also possible that no further islands actually exist beyond 126, as the nuclear shell structure gets smeared out (as the electron shell structure already is expected to be around oganesson) and low-energy decay modes become readily available.
In some regions of the table of nuclides, there are expected to be additional regions of stability due to non-spherical nuclei that have different magic numbers than spherical nuclei do; the egg-shaped 270Hassium is one such deformed doubly magic nucleus. In the superheavy region, the strong Coulomb repulsion of protons may cause some nuclei, including isotopes of oganesson, to assume a bubble shape in the ground state with a reduced central density of protons, unlike the roughly uniform distribution inside most smaller nuclei. Such a shape would have a very low fission barrier, however. Even heavier nuclei in some regions, such as 342136 and 466156, may instead become torus or red blood cell-like in shape, with their own magic numbers and islands of stability, but they would also fragment easily.
Beyond element 123, no complete calculations are available and hence the data in this table must be taken as . In the case of element 123, and perhaps also heavier elements, several possible electron configurations are predicted to have very similar energy levels, such that it is very difficult to predict the ground state. All configurations that have been proposed (since it was understood that the Madelung rule probably stops working here) are included.
The predicted block assignments up to 172 are Kulsha's, following the expected available valence orbitals. There is, however, not a consensus in the literature as to how the blocks should work after element 138.
Predicted structures of an extended periodic table
Aufbau principle
Fricke
H He Li Be B C N O F Ne Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe Cs Ba La Ce–Lu Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn Fr Ra Ac Th–Lr Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Cn Nh Fl Mc Lv Ts Og 119 120 121 142–155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172
Nefedov
+Nefedov et al.'s suggested form (fragment) Cs Ba La–Lu Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn Fr Ra Ac–Lr Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg* Cn* Nh Fl Mc Lv Ts Og 119 120 159 160 161 162 163 164
Pyykkö
Kulsha
Smits et al.
Cs Ba La Ce Pr Nd Pm Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn Fr Ra Ac Th Pa U Np Pu Am Cm Bk Cf Es Fm Md No Lr Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Cn Nh Fl Mc Lv Ts Og 119 120 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133/134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142/143 144 145 145 146 147 148/149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158/159 160 161 162 163 164 167 165 166 169 170
Searches for undiscovered elements
Synthesis attempts
Ununennium (E119)
Unbinilium (E120)
Unbiunium (E121)
No atoms were identified.
Unbibium (E122)
Unbiquadium (E124)
Unbipentium (E125)
Unbihexium (E126)
Unbiseptium (E127)
Searches in nature
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Predicted properties of eighth-period elements
Chemical and physical properties
Elements 119 and 120
> + Some predicted properties of elements 119 and 120
! Property
! 119
! 120
Superactinides
> + Some predicted compounds of the superactinides (X = a halogen)
!
! 121
! 122
! 123
! 124
! 125
! 126
! 127
! 128
! 129
! 132
! 142
! 143
! 144
! 145
! 146
! 148
! 153
! 154
! 155
! 156
! 157
Elements 157 to 166
> + Some predicted properties of elements 156–166
The metallic radii and densities are first approximations.
Most analogous group is given first, followed by other similar groups.
! Property
! 156
! 157
! 158
! 159
! 160
! 161
! 162
! 163
! 164
! 165
! 166
Elements 167 to 172
> + Some predicted properties of elements 167–172
The metallic or covalent radii and densities are first approximations.
! Property
! 167
! 168
! 169
! 170
! 171
! 172
Beyond element 172
End of the periodic table
Elements above the atomic number 137
Bohr model
Relativistic Dirac equation
Quark matter
Nuclear properties
Magic numbers and the island of stability
Predicted decay properties of undiscovered elements
Electron configurations
>
! colspan="3" Chemical element !! Block !! Predicted electron configurations
Og 8s1 Og 8s2 Og 8s2 8p Og 8s2 8p
Og 7d1 8s2 8pOg 6f1 8s2 8p
Og 6f1 7d1 8s2 8p
Og 6f2 8s2 8p
Og 8s2 8p 8pOg 6f2 8s2 8p
Og 6f3 8s2 8pOg 6f4 8s2 8p
Og 5g1 6f2 8s2 8p
Og 5g1 6f3 8s2 8p
Og 8s2 0.81(5g1 6f2 8p) + 0.17(5g1 6f1 7d2 8p) + 0.02(6f3 7d1 8p)Og 5g1 6f4 8s2 8p
Og 5g2 6f2 8s2 8p
Og 5g2 6f3 8s2 8p
Og 8s2 0.998(5g2 6f3 8p) + 0.002(5g2 6f2 8p)Og 5g2 6f3 8s2 8p
Og 5g3 6f2 8s2 8p
Og 8s2 0.88(5g3 6f2 8p) + 0.12(5g3 6f1 7d2 8p)Og 5g3 6f3 8s2 8p
Og 5g4 6f2 8s2 8p
Og 8s2 0.88(5g4 6f2 8p) + 0.12(5g4 6f1 7d2 8p)Og 5g4 6f3 7d1 8s2 8p
Og 5g4 6f3 8s2 8p
Og 5g5 6f2 8s2 8p
Og 5g4 6f3 7d1 8s2 8pOg 5g5 6f3 7d1 8s2 8p
Og 5g5 6f3 8s2 8p
Og 5g6 6f2 8s2 8p
Og 5g5 6f3 7d1 8s2 8pOg 5g6 6f3 8s2 8p
Og 5g7 6f2 8s2 8p
Og 8s2 0.86(5g6 6f3 8p) + 0.14(5g6 6f2 7d2 8p)Og 5g7 6f3 8s2 8p
Og 5g8 6f2 8s2 8pOg 5g8 6f3 8s2 8p Og 5g8 6f4 8s2 8p Og 5g9 6f4 8s2 8p Og 5g10 6f4 8s2 8p Og 5g11 6f4 8s2 8p Og 5g12 6f4 8s2 8p
Og 5g12 6f3 7d1 8s2 8pOg 5g13 6f3 7d1 8s2 8p
Og 5g13 6f2 7d2 8s2 8pOg 5g14 6f3 7d1 8s2 8p
Og 5g15 6f1 8s2 8p 8pOg 5g15 6f2 7d2 8s2 8p Og 5g16 6f2 7d2 8s2 8p Og 5g17 6f2 7d2 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f2 7d2 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f1 7d3 8s2 8p
Og 5g17 6f2 7d3 8s2 8p
Og 8s2 0.95(5g17 6f2 7d3 8p) + 0.05(5g17 6f4 7d1 8p)Og 5g18 6f3 7d2 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f4 7d2 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f5 7d2 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f6 7d2 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f6 7d3 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f6 7d4 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f7 7d3 8s2 8pOg 5g18 6f8 7d3 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f9 7d3 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f10 7d3 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f11 7d2 8s2 8pOg 5g18 6f11 7d3 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f12 7d2 8s2 8pOg 5g18 6f12 7d3 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f13 7d2 8s2 8pOg 5g18 6f13 7d3 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d2 8s2 8pOg 5g18 6f14 7d3 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f14 7d4 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f14 7d5 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d4 8s2 8p 9s1Og 5g18 6f14 7d6 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d5 8s2 8p 9s1Og 5g18 6f14 7d7 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d6 8s2 8p 9s1Og 5g18 6f14 7d8 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d7 8s2 8p 9s1Og 5g18 6f14 7d9 8s2 8p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d8 8s2 8p 9s1Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 9s1 Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 9s2 Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 9s2 9p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 8p 9s2Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 9s2 9p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 8p 9s2Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 8p 9s2 9p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 8p 9s2Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 8p 9s2 9p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 8p 9s2Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 8p 9s2 9p
Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 8p 9s2 9pOg 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p 8p 9s2 9p 172 6g1
172 9p
172 10s1172 8d1 10s1 ... 172 6g5 7f4 8d3
See also
Further reading
External links
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