Marie Curie – Nobel Lecture
Nobel Lecture, December 11, 1911
Radium and the hew concepts in chemistry
Some 15 years ago the radiation of uranium
was discovered by Henri Becquerel1, and two years later the
study of this phenomenon was extended to other substances,
first by me, and then by Pierre Curie and myself2. This study rapidly led us to
the discovery of new elements, the radiation of which, while
being analogous with that of uranium, was far more intense.
All the elements emitting such radiation I have termed
radioactive, and the new property of matter revealed in
this emission has thus received the name radioactivity.
Thanks to this discovery of new, very powerful radioactive
substances, particularly radium, the study of radioactivity
progressed with marvellous rapidity: Discoveries followed each
other in rapid succession, and it was obvious that a new
science was in course of development. The Swedish Academy
of Sciences was kind enough to celebrate the birth
of this science by awarding the Nobel Prize for Physics to the
first workers in the field, Henri Becquerel, Pierre Curie and Marie
Curie (1903).
From that time onward numerous scientists
devoted themselves to the study of radioactivity. Allow me to
recall to you one of them who, by the certainty of his
judgement, and the boldness of his hypotheses and through the
many investigations carried out by him and his pupils, has
succeeded not only in increasing our knowledge but also in
classifying it with great clarity; he has provided a backbone
for the new science, in the form of a very precise theory
admirably suited to the study of the phenomena. I am happy to
recall that Rutherford came to Stockholm in 1908
to receive the Nobel Prize as a well-deserved reward for his
work.
Far from halting, the development of the
new science has constantly continued to follow an upward
course. And now, only 15 years after Becquerel's discovery, we
are face to face with a whole world of new phenomena belonging
to a field which, despite its close connexion with the fields
of physics and chemistry, is particularly well-defined. In
this field the importance of radium from, the viewpoint of
general theories has been decisive. The history of the
discovery and the isolation of this substance has furnished
proof of my hypothesis that radioactivity is an atomic
property of matter and can provide a means of seeking new
elements. This hypothesis has led to present-day theories
of radioactivity, according to which we can predict with
certainty the existence of about 30 new elements which we
cannot generally either isolate or characterize by chemical
methods. We also assume that these elements undergo atomic
transformations, and the most direct proof in favour of this
theory is provided by the experimental fact of the formation
of the chemically defined element helium starting from
the chemically-defined element radium.
Viewing the subject from this angle, it
can be said that the task of isolating radium is the
corner-stone of the edifice of the science of radioactivity.
Moreover, radium remains the most useful and powerful tool in
radioactivity laboratories. I believe that it is because of
these considerations that the Swedish Academy of Sciences has
done me the very great honour of awarding me this year's Nobel
Prize for Chemistry.
It is therefore my task to present to you
radium in particular as a new chemical element, and to leave
aside the description of the many radioactive phenomena which
have already been described in the Nobel Lectures of H.
Becquerel, P. Curie and E. Rutherford.
Before broaching the subject of this
lecture, I should like to recall that the discoveries of
radium and of polonium were made by Pierre Curie in
collaboration with me. We are also indebted to Pierre Curie
for basic research in the field of radioactivity, which has
been carried out either alone, in collaboration with his
pupils.
The chemical work aimed at isolating
radium in the state of the pure salt, and at characterizing it
as a new element, was carried out specially by me, but it is
intimately connected with our common work. I thus feel that I
interpret correctly the intention of the Academy of Sciences
in assuming that the award of this high distinction to me is
motivated by this common work and thus pays homage to the
memory of Pierre Curie.
I will remind you at the outset that one
of the most important properties of the radioactive elements
is that of ionizing the air in their vicinity (Becquerel).
When a uranium compound is placed on a metal plate A situated
opposite another plate B and a difference in potential is
maintained between the plates A and B, an electric current is
set up between these plates; this current can be measured with
accuracy under suitable conditions and will serve as a measure
of the activity of the substance. The conductivity imparted to
the air can be ascribed to ionization produced by the rays
emitted by the uranium compounds.
In 1897, using this method of measurement,
I undertook a study of the radiation of uranium compounds, and
soon extended this study to other substances, with the aim of
finding out whether radiation of this type occurs in other
elements. I found in this way that of the other elements
known, only the compounds of thorium behave like the compounds
of uranium.
I was struck by the fact that the activity
of uranium and thorium compounds appears to be an atomic
property of the element uranium and of the element
thorium. Chemical compounds and mixtures containing
uranium and thorium are active in direct proportion to the
amount of these metals contained in them. The activity is not
destroyed by either physical changes of state or chemical
transformations.
I measured the activity of a number of
minerals; all of them that appear to be radioactive always
contain uranium or thorium. But an unexpected fact was noted:
certain minerals (pitchblende, chalcolite, autunite) had a
greater activity than might be expected on the basis of their
uranium or thorium content. Thus, certain pitchblendes
containing 75% of uranium oxide are about four times as
radioactive as this oxide. Chalcolite (crystallized phosphate
of copper and uranium) is about twice as radioactive as
uranium. This conflicted with views which held that no mineral
should be more radioactive than metallic uranium. To explain
this point I prepared synthetic chalcolite from pure products,
and obtained crystals, whose activity was completely
consistent with their uranium content; this activity is about
half that of uranium.
I then thought that the greater activity
of the natural minerals might be determined by the presence of
a small quantity of a highly-radioactive material, different
from uranium, thorium and the elements known at present. It
also occurred to me that if this was the case I might be able
to extract this substance from the mineral by the ordinary
methods of chemical analysis. Pierre Curie and I at once
carried out this research, hoping that the proportion of the
new element might reach several per cent. In reality the
proportion of the hypothetical element was far lower and it
took several years to show unequivocally that pitchblende
contains at least one highly-radioactive material which is a
new element in the sense that chemistry attaches to the
term.
We were thus led to create a new method of
searching for new elements, a method based on radioactivity
considered as an atomic property of matter. Each chemical
separation is followed by a measurement of the activity of the
products obtained, and in this way it is possible to determine
how the active substance behaves from the chemical viewpoint.
This method has come into general application, and is similar
in some ways to spectral analysis. Because of the wide variety
of radiation emitted, the method could be perfected and
extended, so that it makes it possible, not only to discover
radioactive materials, but also to distinguish them from each
other with certainty.
It was also found in using the method
being considered, that it was in fact possible to concentrate
the activity by chemical methods. We found that pitchblende
contains at least two radioactive materials, one of which,
accompanying bismuth, has been given the name polonium,
while the other, paired with barium, has been called
radium.
Other radioactive elements have been
discovered since: actinium (Debierne), radiothorium and
mesothorium (Hahn), ionium (Boltwood), etc.
We were convinced that the materials which
we had discovered were new chemical elements. This conviction
was based solely on the atomic nature of radioactivity. But at
first, from the chemical viewpoint, it was as if our
substances had been, the one pure bismuth, and the other pure
barium. It was vital to show that the radioactive property was
connected with traces of elements that were neither bismuth
nor barium. To do that the hypothetical elements had to be
isolated. In the case of radium isolation was completely
successful but required several years of unremitting effort.
Radium in the pure salt form is a substance the manufacture of
which has now been industrialized; for no other new
radioactive substance have such positive results been
obtained.
The radiferous minerals are being
subjected to very keen study because the presence of radium
lends them considerable value. They are identifiable either by
the electrometric method, or very simply by the impression
they produce on a photographic plate. The best radium mineral
is the pitchblende from St. Joachimsthal (Austria) which has
for a long time been processed to yield uranium salts. After
extraction of the latter, the mineral leaves a residue which
contains radium and polonium. We have normally used this
residue as our raw material.
The first treatment consists in extracting
the radiferous barium and the bismuth containing the polonium.
This treatment, which was first performed in the laboratory on
several kilograms of raw material (as many as 20 kg) had then
to be undertaken in a factory owing to the need to process
thousands of kilograms. Actually, we gradually learned from
experience that the radium is contained in the raw material in
the proportion of a few decigrams per ton. About 10 to 20 kg
crude barium sulphate containing radium are extracted from one
ton of residue. The activity of these sulphates is even then
30 to 60 times greater than that of uranium. These sulphates
are purified and converted to chlorides. In the mixture of
barium and radium chlorides the radium is present only in the
proportion of about 3 parts per 100,000. In the radium
industry in France a much lower grade mineral is most often
used and the proportion indicated is far lower still. To
separate the radium from the barium I have used a method of
fractional crystallization of the chloride (the bromide can
also be used). The radium salt, less soluble than the barium
salt, becomes concentrated in the crystals. Fractionation is a
lengthy, methodical operation which gradually eliminates the
barium. To obtain a very pure salt I have had to perform
several thousands of crystallizations. The progress of the
fractionation is monitored by activity measurements.
A first proof that the element radium
existed was furnished by spectral analysis. The spectrum of a
chloride enriched by crystallization exhibited a new line
which Demarcay attributed to the new element. As the activity
became more concentrated, the new line increased in intensity
and other lines appeared while the barium spectrum became at
the same time less pronounced. When the purity is very high
the barium spectrum is scarcely visible.
I have repeatedly determined the average
atomic weight of the metal in the salt subjected to spectral
analysis. The method used was the one consisting in
determining the chlorine content in the form of silver
chloride in a known amount of the anhydrous chloride. I have
found that this method gives very good results even with quite
small amounts of substance (0.1 to 0.5 g), provided a very
fast balance is used to avoid the absorption of water by the
alkaline-earth salt during the weighings. The atomic weight
increases with the enrichment of the radium as indicated by
the spectrum. The successive atomic weights obtained were:
138; 146; 174; 225; 226.45. This last value was determined in
1907 with 0.4 g of very pure radium salt. The results of a
number of determinations are, 226.62; 226.31; 226.42. These
have been confirmed by more recent experiments.
The preparation of pure radium salts and
the determination of the atomic weight of radium have proved
positively that radium is a new element and have enabled a
definite position to be assigned to it. Radium is the higher
homologue of barium in the family of alkaline-earth metals; it
has been entered in Mendeleev's table in the corresponding
column, on the row containing uranium and thorium. The radium
spectrum is very precisely known. These very clear-cut results
for radium have convinced chemists and justified the
establishment of the new science of radioactive
substances.
In chemical terms radium differs little
from barium; the salts of these two elements are isomorphic,
while those of radium are usually less soluble than the barium
salts. It is very interesting to note that strong
radioactivity of radium involves no chemical anomalies and
that the chemical properties are actually those which
correspond to the position in the Periodic System indicated by
its atomic weight. The radioactivity of radium in solid salts
is ca. 5 million times greater than that of an equal weight of
uranium. Owing to this activity its salts are spontaneously
luminous. I also wish to recall that radium gives rise to a
continuous liberation of energy which can be measured as heat,
being about 118 calories per gram of radium per hour.
Radium has been isolated in the metallic
state (M. Curie and A. Debierne, 1910). The method used
consisted in distilling under very pure hydrogen the amalgam
of radium formed by the electrolysis of a chloride solution
using a mercury cathode. One decigram only of salt was treated
and consequently considerable difficulties were involved. The
metal obtained melts at about 700°C, above which temperature
it starts to volatilize. Is it very unstable in the air and
decomposes water vigorously.
The radioactive properties of the metal
are exactly the ones that can be forecast on the assumption
that the radioactivity of the salts is an atomic property of
the radium which is unaffected by the state of combination. It
was of real importance to corroborate this point as misgivings
had been voiced by those to whom the atomic hypothesis of
radioactivity was still not evident.
Although radium has so far only been
obtained in very small amounts, it is nevertheless true to
say, in conclusion, that it is a perfectly defined and already
well-studied chemical element.
Unfortunately, the same cannot be stated
for polonium, for which nevertheless considerable effort has
already been spent. The stumbling block here is the fact that
the proportion of polonium in the mineral is about 5,000 times
smaller than that of radium.
Before theoretical evidence was available
from which to forecast this proportion, I had conducted
several extremely laborious operations to concentrate polonium
and in this way had secured products with very high activity
without being able to arrive at definite results as in the
case of radium. The difficulty is heightened by the fact that
polonium disintegrates spontaneously, disappearing by half in
a period of 140 days. We now know that radium has not an
infinite life either, but the rate of disappearance is far
less (it disappears by half in 2,000 years). With our
facilities we can scarcely hope to determine the atomic weight
of polonium because theory foresees that a rich mineral can
contain only a few hundredths of a milligram per ton, but we
can hope to observe its spectrum. The operation of
concentrating polonium, as I shall point out later, is,
moreover, a problem of great theoretical interest.
Recently, in collaboration with Debierne,
I undertook to treat several tons of residues from uranium
mineral with a view to preparing polonium. Initially conducted
in the factory, then in the laboratory, this treatment finally
yielded a few milligrams of substance about 50 times more
active than an equal weight of pure radium. In the spectrum of
the substance some new lines could be observed which appear
attributable to polonium and of which the most important has
the wavelength 4170.5 Å. According to the atomic hypothesis of
radioactivity, the polonium spectrum should disappear at the
same time as the activity and this fact can be confirmed
experimentally,
I have so far considered radium and
polonium only as chemical substances. I have shown how the
fundamental hypothesis which states that radioactivity is an
atomic property of the substance has led to the discovery of
new chemical elements. I shall now describe how the scope of
this hypothesis has been greatly enlarged by the
considerations and experimental facts which resulted in
establishing the theory of atomic radioactive
transformations.
The starting-point of this theory must be
sought in the considerations of the source of the energy
involved in the phenomena of radioactivity. This energy
becomes manifest as an emission of rays which produce thermal,
electrical and light phenomena. As the emission occurs
spontaneously without any known cause of excitation, various
hypotheses have been advanced to account for the liberation of
energy. One of the hypotheses put forward at the beginning of
our research by Pierre Curie and myself consisted in assuming
that the radiation is an emission of matter accompanied by a
loss in weight of the active substances and that the energy is
taken from the substance itself whose evolution is not yet
completes and which undergoes an atomic transformation. This
hypothesis, which at first could only be enunciated together
with other equally valid theories, has attained dominant
importance and finally asserted itself in our minds owing to a
body of experimental evidence which substantiated it. This
evidence is essentially the following: A series of radioactive
phenomena exists in which radioactivity appears to be tied up
to matter in an imponderable quantity, the radiation moreover
not being permanent but disappearing more or less rapidly with
time. Such are polonium, radioactive emanations and deposits
of induced radioactivity.
It has been established moreover in
certain cases that the radioactivity observed increases with
time. This is what happens in the case of freshly prepared
radium, of the emanation freshly introduced into the measuring
apparatus, of thorium deprived of thorium X, etc.
A careful study of these phenomena has
shown that a very satisfactory general explanation can be
given by assuming that each time a decrease of radioactivity
is observed there is a destruction of radioactive matter, and
that each time an increase of activity is observed, there is a
production of radioactive matter. The radiations which
disappear and appear are, besides, of very varied nature and
it is admitted that every kind of rays determined can serve to
characterize a substance which is its source, and appears and
disappears with it.
As radioactivity is in addition a property
which is essentially atomic, the production or the destruction
of a distinct type of radioactivity corresponds to a
production or a destruction of atoms of a radioactive
substance.
Finally, if it is supposed that
radioactive energy is a phenomenon which is borrowed from
atomic transformation, it can be deduced from this that every
radioactive substance undergoes such a transformation, even
though it appears to us to be invariable. Transformation in
this case is only very slow and this is what takes place in
the case of radium or uranium.
The theory I have just summarized is the
work of Rutherford and Soddy, which they have called
theory of atomic disintegration. By applying this
theory it can be concluded that a primary radioactive
substance such as radium undergoes a series of atomic
transmutations by virtue of which the atom of radium gives
birth to a train of atoms of smaller and smaller weights,
since a stable state cannot be attained as long as the atom
formed is radioactive. Stability can only be attained by
inactive matter.
From this point of view one of the most
brilliant triumphs of the theory is the prediction that the
gas helium, always present in radioactive minerals, can
represent one of the end-products of the evolution of radium,
and that it is in the form of alpha rays that the helium atoms
which are formed when radium atoms distintegrate are
discharged. Now, the production of helium by radium has been
proved by the experiments of Ramsay and Soddy, and it cannot now
be contested that the perfectly defined chemical element,
radium, gives rise to the formation of another equally defined
element - helium. Moreover, the investigations done by
Rutherford and his students have proved that the alpha
particles emitted by radium with an electric charge are also
to be found in the form of helium gas in the space where they
have been recovered.
I must remark here that the bold
interpretation of the relationship existing between radium and
helium rests entirely upon the certitude that radium has the
same claim to be a chemical element as have all the other
known elements, and that there can be no question of regarding
it to be a molecular combination of helium with another
element. This shows how fundamental in these circumstances has
been the work carried out to prove the chemical individuality
of radium, and it can also be seen in what way the hypothesis
of the atomic nature of radioactivity and the theory of
radioactive transformations have led to the experimental
discovery of a first clearly-established example of atomic
transmutation. This is a fact the significance of which cannot
escape anyone, and one which incontestably marks an epoch from
the point of view of chemists.
Considerable work, guided by the theory of
radioactive transformations, has led to approximately 30 new
radioactive elements being envisaged, classified in 4 series
according to the primary substance: these series are uranium,
radium, thorium and actinium. The uranium and radium series
can, in fact, be combined, for it seems to be proved that
radium is a derivative of uranium. In the radium series the
last known radioactive body is polonium, the production of
which by radium is now a proven fact. It is likely that the
actinium series is related to that of radium.
We have seen that helium gas is one of the
products of radium distintegration. The helium atoms are
detached from those of radium and its derivatives during the
course of the transformation. It is supposed that after the
departure of four atoms of helium, the radium atom yields one
atom of polonium; the departure of a fifth helium atom
determines the formation of an inactive body with an atomic
weight believed to be equal to 206 (20 units below that of
radium). According to Rutherford this final element is nothing
more than lead, and this supposition is now being subjected to
experimental verification in my laboratory. The production of
helium from polonium has been directly proved by Debierne.
The relatively large amount of polonium
prepared by Curie and Debierne has allowed an important study
to be undertaken. This consists in counting a large number of
alpha particles emitted by polonium and in collecting and
measuring the corresponding volume of helium. Since each
particle is a helium atom, the number of helium atoms is thus
found which occupy a given volume and have a given weight. It
can therefore allow us to deduce, in a general way, the number
of molecules in a grammolecule. This number, known as
Avogadro's constant, is of great importance. Experiments
conducted on polonium have supplied a first value for this
number, which is in good agreement with the values obtained by
other methods. The enumeration of alpha particles is done by
an electrometric method due to Rutherford; this method has
been brought to perfection by means of a photographic
recording apparatus.
Recent investigations have shown that
potassium and rubidium emit a very feeble radiation, similar
to the beta radiation of uranium and radium. We do not yet
know whether we should regard these substances as true
radioactive bodies, i.e. bodies in the process of
transformation.
To conclude I should like to emphasize the
nature of the new chemistry of radioactive bodies. Tons of
material have to be treated in order to extract radium from
the ore. The quantities of radium available in a laboratory
are of the order of one milligram, or of a gram at the very
most, this substance being worth 400,000 francs per gram. Very
often material has been handled in which the presence of
radium could not be detected by the balance, nor even by the
spectroscope. And yet we have methods of measuring so perfect
and so sensitive that we are able to know very exactly the
small quantities of radium we are using. Radioactive analysis
by electrometric methods allows us to calculate to within 1% a
thousandth of a milligram of radium, and to detect the
presence of 10-10 grams of radium diluted in a few
grams of material. This method is the only one which could
have led to the discovery of radium in view of the dilution of
this substance in the ore. The sensitivity of the methods is
still more striking in the case of radium emanation, which can
be detected when the quantity present amounts, for example, to
only 10-10 mm3. As the specific activity of
a substance is, in the case of analogous radiations,
approximately in inverse proportion to the average life, the
result is that if the average life is very brief, the
radioactive reaction can attain an unprecedented sensitivity.
We are also accustomed to deal currently in the laboratory
with substances the presence of which is only shown to us by
their radioactive properties but which nevertheless we can
determine, dissolve, reprecipitate from their solutions and
deposit electrolytically. This means that we have here an
entirely separate kind of chemistry for which the current tool
we use is the electrometer, not the balance, and which we
might well call the chemistry of the imponderable.
1. H. Becquerel, Compt.
Rend., (1896).
2. P. Curie and M. Curie,
Compt. Rend., (1898); (1899).
3. M. Curie, Rev. Gen.
Sci., (1899); Rev. Sci., (1900).
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry
1901-1921.
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