Naturally occurring niobium is composed of one stable isotope, 93Nb.
However in the lab, at least 32 radioisotopes had been synthesized.
There is one stable isotope in Niobium, Nb93 there are 28 known isotopes in all.
The three main isotopes of niobium are niobium-93, niobium-95, and niobium-96. These isotopes are stable and occur naturally in different abundances. Niobium-93 is the most abundant isotope, followed by niobium-95 and niobium-96.
Yes very dangerous, even more dangerous than a crazy elephant chasing a human.
To determine the number of moles in 237g of niobium, we need to use the molar mass of niobium, which is approximately 92.91 g/mol. By dividing 237g by the molar mass of niobium, we find that there are approximately 2.55 moles of niobium in 237g.
There are 41 protons in Niobium. The atomic number is the same as the number of protons.
Niobium only seems to have one valence electron. Why it doesn't have two like the rest of the transition metals is beyond me.
41
They are niobium-titanium or niobium-tin intermetallic compounds.
41 protons 41 electrons 52 neutrons
52 neutrons.
niobium period
Niobium oxychloride (NbOCl3).