History
(origin is Latin "Hassias" meaning "Hess", the German state.) Discovered by Peter Armbruster, Gottfried Munzenber and co-workers at GSI in Darmstadt, Germany in 1984.[1]
Properties
| General |
|---|
| Name : hassium |
| Symbol : Hs |
| Atomic Number : 108 |
| Chemical Series : Transition Metal |
| Block, Period : 8, 7 |
| Appearance : unknown |
| Atomic Properties |
| Atomic Weight : 269 |
| Covalent Radius (pm) : n/a |
| Physical Properties |
| Matter : presumably a solid (radioactive) (synthetic) |
| Density (kg/ |
| Hardness : n/a |
| Melting Point (K) : n/a |
| Boiling Point (K) : n/a |
| Evaporation Heat (kJ/mol) : n/a |
| Fusion Heat (kJ/mol) : n/a |
| Specific Heat (J/(kg*K) ) : n/a |
| Miscellaneous |
| Electrical Conductivity ( |
| Thermal Conductivity (W/(m*K) ) : n/a |
Notes
[1] From Los Alamos National Laboratory's Chemistry Division Website
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