Agent Name |
Curium |
CAS Number |
7440-51-9 |
Formula |
Cm |
Major Category |
Physical Agents |
Category |
Radionuclides |
Description |
A man-made radioactive metal with a melting point of 1345 degrees C; Known isotopes have mass numbers of 238-251; Cm-247 is the isotope with the longest half life; [Merck Index # 2675] |
Sources/Uses |
Cm-242 and Cm-244 are used to power batteries for space and medical devices; Cm-248 is used in research accelerators to produce other elements; [Merck Index #2675] Curium is produced from plutonium and americium by neutron capture in nuclear reactors. Six of the curium isotopes have half-lives longer than 20 years and are defined as transuranic wastes (TRU) produced in nuclear reactors. [Argonne] |
Comments |
Most Important Radionuclide: Cu-244
Source: Nuclear reactors
Half-Life: 18 years
Effective Half-Life: 16.7 years
Specific Activity: 82 Ci/g
Decay Mode: Alpha
GI Absorption: 0.05%
Lung Clearance Half-Time: Weeks (10-100 days) for all compounds;
Critical Organ: Liver
Internal Toxicity: Very High
Annual Limit on Intake: 0.000001 mCi
Average Radiation Energy (MeV): Alpha 5.8; Beta 0.086; Gamma 0.0017; [Argonne]
[See Glossary for references.] See "Radiation, ionizing."
|
Exposure Assessment |
Half Life |
Biological half-life: 20 years (liver) and 50 years (bone); [ANL Radiological Fact Sheets] |
Links to Other NLM Databases |
Health Studies |
Human Health Effects from Hazardous Substances Data Bank: CURIUM, RADIOACTIVE IONIZING RADIATION
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