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transuranic element

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transuranic element

Chemical element with an atomic number of 93 or more – that is, with a greater number of protons in the nucleus than has uranium. All transuranic elements are radioactive. Neptunium and plutonium are found in nature; the others are synthesized in nuclear reactions.

Research in transuranics is pursued mainly at the Lawrence radiation laboratories of the University of California at Berkeley; the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, USSR; and the Institute for Heavy-Ion Research in Darmstadt, Germany. These institutes have produced a number of new elements over the last few decades, in the quest to reach a predicted ‘island of stability’ at higher atomic numbers.



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Transuranic elements with long half-lives are also produced, but it may be possible to render them innocuous; until this can be done, they will have to be stored.
When the transuranic elements are consumed by the ABR, a large amount of energy is released and then converted into electricity.
GNEP calls for the promotion of effective utilization of nuclear energy resources through recycling of spent nuclear fuels from light water reactors and generating electricity with an advanced reactor that consumes transuranic elements as part of its fuel.
 
 
 
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