2013
DOI: 10.1351/pac-rep-13-03-02
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Atomic weights of the elements 2011 (IUPAC Technical Report)

Abstract: Abstract:The biennial review of atomic-weight determinations and other cognate data has resulted in changes for the standard atomic weights of five elements. The atomic weight of bromine has changed from 79.904(1) to the interval [79.901, 79.907], germanium from 72.63(1) to 72.630(8), indium from 114.818(3) to 114.818(1), magnesium from 24.3050(6) to the interval [24.304, 24.307], and mercury from 200.59(2) to 200.592(3). For bromine and magnesium, assignment of intervals for the new standard atomic weights re… Show more

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Cited by 358 publications
(159 citation statements)
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“…The current report summarizes some of the known variations in the isotopic composition and atomic weight of Ar in terrestrial materials and processes that cause those variations. Presented as an interval, using current IUPAC criteria adopted in 2009 and 2011 [13,14], the standard atomic weight of Ar could have lower and upper bounds outside the current standard atomic-weight uncertainties, as described below.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The current report summarizes some of the known variations in the isotopic composition and atomic weight of Ar in terrestrial materials and processes that cause those variations. Presented as an interval, using current IUPAC criteria adopted in 2009 and 2011 [13,14], the standard atomic weight of Ar could have lower and upper bounds outside the current standard atomic-weight uncertainties, as described below.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous Commission studies summarized variations in isotopic composition and atomic weight of elements exhibiting effects of natural isotopic fractionation [13][14][15]. Elements with substantial abundances of radiogenic (or nucleogenic) isotopes were excluded from those studies because ratios of radiogenic/nonradiogenic isotopes can be highly variable and do not conform to common mass-dependent isotopic fractionation relations used to estimate atomic weights from partial isotopic analyses of fractionated samples.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2 показаны зависимости темпе-ратурных коэффициентов для наиболее интенсивных пиков в масс-спектре, которые соответствуют ионам Se + (m/z = 80) и Se + 2 (m/z = 160). 1 Приведенные нами зависимости для температурных коэффициентов ана-логичны полученным в [13], где сделано заключе-ние о минимальном температурном коэффициенте для ионов Se …”
Section: температурные зависимостиunclassified
“…Селен является уникальным элементом, свойства ко-торого зависят от условий его получения, а число атомов в молекулах селена зависит от температуры, что обусловливает существование аллотропических модифи-каций [1]. Селен изменяет свои свойства в зависимо-сти от внешних условий: при атмосферном давлении существует несколько десятков модификаций селена.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…The footnotes to the TSAW are linked directly to variations in isotopic composition of an element, which impacts it atomic weight. All known elements can be categorized according to the following constraints on their standard atomic weights [6,7] The Commission uses the footnote "r" to identify elements in this subcategory for which the standard-atomic-weight uncertainty has been expanded to account for known atomicweight variability. 4.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%