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Featured researches published by K. Eberhardt.


Nature | 2002

Chemical investigation of hassium (element 108).

Ch. E. Düllmann; W. Brüchle; R. Dressler; K. Eberhardt; B. Eichler; R. Eichler; H. W. Gäggeler; Thomas Nelson Ginter; F. Glaus; Kenneth E. Gregorich; Darleane C. Hoffman; E. Jäger; D. T. Jost; U. W. Kirbach; Diana Lee; Heino Nitsche; J. B. Patin; Valeria Pershina; D. Piguet; Z. H. Qin; M. Schädel; B. Schausten; E. Schimpf; H. J. Schött; S. Soverna; R. Sudowe; P. Thörle; S. N. Timokhin; N. Trautmann; A. Türler

The periodic table provides a classification of the chemical properties of the elements. But for the heaviest elements, the transactinides, this role of the periodic table reaches its limits because increasingly strong relativistic effects on the valence electron shells can induce deviations from known trends in chemical properties. In the case of the first two transactinides, elements 104 and 105, relativistic effects do indeed influence their chemical properties, whereas elements 106 and 107 both behave as expected from their position within the periodic table. Here we report the chemical separation and characterization of only seven detected atoms of element 108 (hassium, Hs), which were generated as isotopes 269Hs (refs 8, 9) and 270Hs (ref. 10) in the fusion reaction between 26Mg and 248Cm. The hassium atoms are immediately oxidized to a highly volatile oxide, presumably HsO4, for which we determine an enthalpy of adsorption on our detector surface that is comparable to the adsorption enthalpy determined under identical conditions for the osmium oxide OsO4. These results provide evidence that the chemical properties of hassium and its lighter homologue osmium are similar, thus confirming that hassium exhibits properties as expected from its position in group 8 of the periodic table.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2008

TRIGA-SPEC: A setup for mass spectrometry and laser spectroscopy at the research reactor TRIGA Mainz

Jens Ketelaer; J. Krämer; D. Beck; Klaus Blaum; M. Block; K. Eberhardt; G. Eitel; R. Ferrer; Christopher Geppert; S. George; F. Herfurth; J. Ketter; Sz. Nagy; D. Neidherr; R. Neugart; W. Nörtershäuser; J. Repp; C. Smorra; N. Trautmann; C. Weber

Abstract The research reactor TRIGA Mainz is an ideal facility to provide neutron-rich nuclides with production rates sufficiently large for mass spectrometric and laser spectroscopic studies. Within the TRIGA-SPEC project, a Penning trap as well as a beamline for collinear laser spectroscopy are being installed. Several new developments will ensure high sensitivity of the trap setup enabling mass measurements even on a single ion. Besides neutron-rich fission products produced in the reactor, also heavy nuclides such as 235 U or 252 Cf can be investigated for the first time with an off-line ion source. The data provided by the mass measurements will be of interest for astrophysical calculations on the rapid neutron-capture process as well as for tests of mass models in the heavy-mass region. The laser spectroscopic measurements will yield model-independent information on nuclear ground-state properties such as nuclear moments and charge radii of neutron-rich nuclei of refractory elements far from stability. TRIGA-SPEC also serves as a test facility for mass and laser spectroscopic experiments at SHIPTRAP and the low-energy branch of the future GSI facility FAIR. This publication describes the experimental setup as well as its present status.


Journal of Alloys and Compounds | 1998

Determination of the first ionization potential of nine actinide elements by resonance ionization mass spectroscopy (RIMS)

Nicole Erdmann; M. Nunnemann; K. Eberhardt; G. Herrmann; G. Huber; S. Köhler; J. V. Kratz; G. Passler; J.R. Peterson; N. Trautmann; A. Waldek

The high sensitivity of RIMS enables the precise determination of the first ionization potential of actinide elements with a sample size of ≤1012 atoms. By multiple resonant laser excitation, the actinide atoms under investigation are ionized in the presence of an electric field, and the ions are mass-selectively detected in a time-of-flight spectrometer. The first ionization potential is obtained by scanning the wavelength of the laser used for the last excitation step across the ionization threshold Wth—indicated by a sudden increase of the ion count rate—at various electric field strengths. Extrapolation of Wth to electric field strength zero leads directly to the first ionization potential. The first ionization potentials (IP) of Am, Cm, Bk, Cf and Es were determined for the first time as IPAm=5.9736(3) eV, IPCm=5.9914(2) eV, IPBk=6.1979(2) eV, IPCf=6.2817(2) eV, IPEs=6.3676(5) eV with samples of 1012 atoms. Furthermore, the ionization potentials of Th, U, Np and Pu were remeasured.


Nature | 2015

Measurement of the first ionization potential of lawrencium, element 103

T. K. Sato; M. Asai; A. Borschevsky; T. Stora; N. Sato; Y. Kaneya; K. Tsukada; Ch. E. Düllmann; K. Eberhardt; E. Eliav; S. Ichikawa; U. Kaldor; J. V. Kratz; Sunao Miyashita; Y. Nagame; K. Ooe; A. Osa; D. Renisch; J. Runke; M. Schädel; P. Thörle-Pospiech; A. Toyoshima; N. Trautmann

The chemical properties of an element are primarily governed by the configuration of electrons in the valence shell. Relativistic effects influence the electronic structure of heavy elements in the sixth row of the periodic table, and these effects increase dramatically in the seventh row—including the actinides—even affecting ground-state configurations. Atomic s and p1/2 orbitals are stabilized by relativistic effects, whereas p3/2, d and f orbitals are destabilized, so that ground-state configurations of heavy elements may differ from those of lighter elements in the same group. The first ionization potential (IP1) is a measure of the energy required to remove one valence electron from a neutral atom, and is an atomic property that reflects the outermost electronic configuration. Precise and accurate experimental determination of IP1 gives information on the binding energy of valence electrons, and also, therefore, on the degree of relativistic stabilization. However, such measurements are hampered by the difficulty in obtaining the heaviest elements on scales of more than one atom at a time. Here we report that the experimentally obtained IP1 of the heaviest actinide, lawrencium (Lr, atomic number 103), is electronvolts. The IP1 of Lr was measured with 256Lr (half-life 27 seconds) using an efficient surface ion-source and a radioisotope detection system coupled to a mass separator. The measured IP1 is in excellent agreement with the value of 4.963(15) electronvolts predicted here by state-of-the-art relativistic calculations. The present work provides a reliable benchmark for theoretical calculations and also opens the way for IP1 measurements of superheavy elements (that is, transactinides) on an atom-at-a-time scale.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

Superheavy Element Flerovium (Element 114) Is a Volatile Metal

A. Yakushev; J. M. Gates; A. Türler; M. Schädel; Christoph E. Düllmann; D. Ackermann; Lise-Lotte Andersson; Michael Block; W. Brüchle; Jan Dvorak; K. Eberhardt; H. G. Essel; J. Even; Ulrika Forsberg; A. Gorshkov; R. Graeger; Kenneth E. Gregorich; Willi Hartmann; R.-D. Herzberg; F. P. Heßberger; D. Hild; A. Hübner; Egon Jäger; J. Khuyagbaatar; B. Kindler; Jens Volker Kratz; J. Krier; N. Kurz; B. Lommel; L. Niewisch

The electron shell structure of superheavy elements, i.e., elements with atomic number Z ≥ 104, is influenced by strong relativistic effects caused by the high Z. Early atomic calculations on element 112 (copernicium, Cn) and element 114 (flerovium, Fl) having closed and quasi-closed electron shell configurations of 6d(10)7s(2) and 6d(10)7s(2)7p1/2(2), respectively, predicted them to be noble-gas-like due to very strong relativistic effects on the 7s and 7p1/2 valence orbitals. Recent fully relativistic calculations studying Cn and Fl in different environments suggest them to be less reactive compared to their lighter homologues in the groups, but still exhibiting a metallic character. Experimental gas-solid chromatography studies on Cn have, indeed, revealed a metal-metal bond formation with Au. In contrast to this, for Fl, the formation of a weak bond upon physisorption on a Au surface was inferred from first experiments. Here, we report on a gas-solid chromatography study of the adsorption of Fl on a Au surface. Fl was produced in the nuclear fusion reaction (244)Pu((48)Ca, 3-4n)(288,289)Fl and was isolated in-flight from the primary (48)Ca beam in a physical recoil separator. The adsorption behavior of Fl, its nuclear α-decay product Cn, their lighter homologues in groups 14 and 12, i.e., Pb and Hg, and the noble gas Rn were studied simultaneously by isothermal gas chromatography and thermochromatography. Two Fl atoms were detected. They adsorbed on a Au surface at room temperature in the first, isothermal part, but not as readily as Pb and Hg. The observed adsorption behavior of Fl points to a higher inertness compared to its nearest homologue in the group, Pb. However, the measured lower limit for the adsorption enthalpy of Fl on a Au surface points to the formation of a metal-metal bond of Fl with Au. Fl is the least reactive element in the group, but still a metal.


Nature | 2016

Direct detection of the 229Th nuclear clock transition

Lars von der Wense; Benedict Seiferle; Mustapha Laatiaoui; J. B. Neumayr; Hans-Jörg Maier; Hans-Friedrich Wirth; Christoph Mokry; J. Runke; K. Eberhardt; Christoph E. Düllmann; N. Trautmann; P. G. Thirolf

Today’s most precise time and frequency measurements are performed with optical atomic clocks. However, it has been proposed that they could potentially be outperformed by a nuclear clock, which employs a nuclear transition instead of an atomic shell transition. There is only one known nuclear state that could serve as a nuclear clock using currently available technology, namely, the isomeric first excited state of 229Th (denoted 229mTh). Here we report the direct detection of this nuclear state, which is further confirmation of the existence of the isomer and lays the foundation for precise studies of its decay parameters. On the basis of this direct detection, the isomeric energy is constrained to between 6.3 and 18.3 electronvolts, and the half-life is found to be longer than 60 seconds for 229mTh2+. More precise determinations appear to be within reach, and would pave the way to the development of a nuclear frequency standard.


Nature | 2016

Direct detection of the Th-229 nuclear clock transition

Lars von der Wense; Benedict Seiferle; Mustapha Laatiaoui; J. B. Neumayr; Hans-Jörg Maier; Hans-Friedrich Wirth; Christoph Mokry; J. Runke; K. Eberhardt; Christoph E. Düllmann; N. Trautmann; P. G. Thirolf

Today’s most precise time and frequency measurements are performed with optical atomic clocks. However, it has been proposed that they could potentially be outperformed by a nuclear clock, which employs a nuclear transition instead of an atomic shell transition. There is only one known nuclear state that could serve as a nuclear clock using currently available technology, namely, the isomeric first excited state of 229Th (denoted 229mTh). Here we report the direct detection of this nuclear state, which is further confirmation of the existence of the isomer and lays the foundation for precise studies of its decay parameters. On the basis of this direct detection, the isomeric energy is constrained to between 6.3 and 18.3 electronvolts, and the half-life is found to be longer than 60 seconds for 229mTh2+. More precise determinations appear to be within reach, and would pave the way to the development of a nuclear frequency standard.


European Physical Journal A | 2016

Review of even element super-heavy nuclei and search for element 120

S. Hofmann; S. Heinz; Robert B. Mann; J. Maurer; G. Münzenberg; S. Antalic; W. Barth; H. G. Burkhard; L. Dahl; K. Eberhardt; R. Grzywacz; J. H. Hamilton; R. A. Henderson; J. M. Kenneally; B. Kindler; I. Kojouharov; R. Lang; B. Lommel; K. Miernik; D. Miller; K. J. Moody; Kosuke Morita; K. Nishio; A. G. Popeko; J. B. Roberto; J. Runke; K. Rykaczewski; S. Saro; Christoph Scheidenberger; H.-J. Schott

Abstract.The reaction 54Cr


Spectrochimica Acta Part B: Atomic Spectroscopy | 1997

Determination of the first ionization potential of actinide elements by resonance ionization mass spectroscopy

S. Köhler; R. Deiβenberger; K. Eberhardt; Nicole Erdmann; G. Herrmann; G. Huber; Jens Volker Kratz; M. Nunnemann; G. Passler; Pushpa M. Rao; J. Riegel; N. Trautmann; K. Wendt

+


Radiochimica Acta | 2006

Determination of stability constants of lanthanide nitrate complex formation using a solvent extraction technique

Sofie Andersson; K. Eberhardt; Christian Ekberg; Jan-Olov Liljenzin; Mikael Nilsson; Gunnar Skarnemark

248Cm was investigated at the velocity filter SHIP at GSI, Darmstadt, with the intention to study production and decay properties of isotopes of element 120. Three correlated signals were measured, which occurred within a period of 279ms. The heights of the signals correspond with the expectations for a decay sequence starting with an isotope of element 120. However, a complete decay chain cannot be established, since a signal from the implantation of the evaporation residue cannot be identified unambiguously. Measured properties of the event chain are discussed in detail. The result is compared with theoretical predictions. Previously measured decay properties of even element super-heavy nuclei were compiled in order to find arguments for an assignment from the systematics of experimental data. In the course of this review, a few tentatively assigned data could be corrected. New interpretations are given for results which could not be assigned definitely in previous studies. The discussion revealed that the cross-section for production of element 120 could be high enough so that a successful experiment seems possible with presently available techniques. However, a continuation of the experiment at SHIP for a necessary confirmation of the results obtained in a relatively short irradiation of five weeks is not possible at GSI presently. Therefore, we decided to publish the results of the measurement and of the review as they exist now. In the summary and outlook section we also present concepts for the continuation of research in the field of super-heavy nuclei.

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M. Schädel

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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E. Jäger

Goethe University Frankfurt

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B. Kindler

GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research

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B. Schausten

Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute

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E. Schimpf

Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute

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