Nuclear isomer

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Nuclear isomers are nuclear species with the same number of neutrons and the same number of protons, but different binding energy per nucleon are called isomers of that nuclide.[1] Nuclear isomers shouldn't be confused with chemical isomers. These nuclei have organized the nucleons (protons and neutrons) into a slightly different energy configuration, one of which is almost always unstable. Usually, the protons or neutrons rearrange themselves and give off a gamma ray when giving off this excess energy. This is called gamma decay.

One well known and very useful nuclear isomer is technetium-99m. Tc-99m is the most used medical isotope for diagnostic procedures in the modern world. Tc-99m has a half life of 6 hours, while Tc-99 has a half life of 210,000 years. Both of these isomers have 43 protons and 56 neutrons, but Tc-99m doesn't last for nearly as long, and undergoes a [math]\beta^-[/math] decay.

For Further Reading

References

  1. McNaught, A.D. and A. Wilkinson (Eds.). (2014, Dec. 10). IUPAC. Compendium of Chemical Terminology (2nd ed., the "Gold Book"). Available: https://goldbook.iupac.org/terms/view/N04234 Accessed January 29th, 2020.