The chemistry of the actinide and transactinide elements; contents; contributors; preface; chapter one: introduction; chapter two: actinium; chapter three: thorium; chapter four: protactinium; chapter five: uranium; chapter six: neptunium; chapter seven: plutonium; chapter eight: americium; chapter nine: curium; chapter ten: berkelium; chapter eleven: californium; chapter twelve: einsteinium; chapter thirteen: fermium, mendelevium, nobelium, and lawrencium; chapter fourteen: transactinide elements and future elements.
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CHAPTER FIFTEEN: SUMMARY AND COMPARISON OF PROPERTIES OF THE ACTINIDE AND TRANSACTINIDE ELEMENTSCHAPTER SIXTEEN: SPECTRA AND ELECTRONIC STRUCTURES OF FREE ACTINIDE ATOMS AND IONS; CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: THEORETICAL STUDIES OF THE ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE OF COMPOUNDS OF THE ACTINIDE ELEMENTS; CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: OPTICAL SPECTRA AND ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE; CHAPTER NINETEEN: THERMODYNAMIC PROPERTIES OF ACTINIDES AND ACTINIDE COMPOUNDS; CHAPTER TWENTY: MAGNETIC PROPERTIES; CHAPTER TWENTY ONE: 5f-ELECTRON PHENOMENAIN THE METALLIC STATE; CHAPTER TWENTY TWO: ACTINIDE STRUCTURAL CHEMISTRY.
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Chapter thirty-eight: molecular spectroscopy and reactions of actinides in the gas phase and cryogenic matriceschapter thirty-nine: hydrothermal synthesis and crystal structures of actinide compounds; subject index; author index.
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Chapter thirtyt: race analysis of actinides in geological, environmental, and biological matriceschapter thirty one: actinides in animals and man; chapter thirty-two: actinides in the geosphere; chapter thirty-three: subsurface interactions of actinide species withmicroorganisms; chapter thirty four: nuclear fuels; chapter thirty-five: actinide waste forms and radiation effects; chapter thirty-six: analytical chemistry of plutonium; chapter thirty-seven: actinide chalcogenide compounds.
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Chapter twenty three: actinides in solution: complexation and kineticschapter twenty four: actinide separation science and technology; chapter twenty five: organoactinide chemistry: synthesis and characterization; chapter twenty six: homogeneous and heterogeneous catalytic processes promoted by organoactinides; chapter twenty seven: identification and speciation of actinides in the environment; chapter twenty eight: x-ray absorption spectroscopy of the actinides; chapter twenty nine: handling, storage, and disposition of plutonium and uranium.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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The Chemistry of the Actinide and Transactinide Elements is the contemporary and definitive exposition of chemical properties of all of the actinide elements, especially of the technologically important elements uranium and plutonium, as well as the transactinide elements. In addition to the comprehensive treatment of the chemical properties of each element, ions and compounds from atomic number 89 (actinium) through 109 (meitnerium), the multi-volume work has specialized and authoritative chapters on electronic theory, optical and laser fluorescence spectroscopy, X-ray absorption spectroscopy, organoactinide chemistry, thermodynamics, magnetic properties, the metals, coordination chemistry, separations, trace analysis, The Editors invited teams of authors, who are active practitioners and recognized experts in their specialty, to write each chapter and have endeavored to provide a balanced and insightful treatment of these fascinating elements at the frontier of the periodic table. Because the field has expanded with new spectroscopic techniques and environmental focus, the work now encompasses six volumes. All chapters represent the current state of research in the chemistry of these elements and related fields.
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Title
Chemistry of the actinide and transactinide elements.