Darmstadtium was discovered in 1994 by:
Sigurd Hofmann, Victor Ninov, Fritz Peter Hessberger, Peter Armbruster, H. Folger, Gottfried Munzenberg, H.J. Schott, Andrei Gheorghievici Popeko, Alexandr Vladimirovici Eremin, A.N. Andreev, S. Saro, Rudolf Janik, Matti Leino
Two nuclear reactions to prepare darmstadtium:
Pb-208 + Ni-62 = Ds-269 + n
Pb-208 + Ni-64 = Ds-2171 + n
The original name of darmstadtium was ununnilium when it was first discovered in 1994. It was later named darmstadtium after the city of Darmstadt, Germany where the research facility that discovered it is located.
The name of the artificial chemical element darmstadtium is derived from the name of the town Darmstadt (Germany) where this element was discovered.
Darmstadtium was discovered by a team of scientists led by Peter Armbruster and Gottfried Münzenberg at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI) in Darmstadt, Germany in 1994. It was named after the city of Darmstadt.
No elements were discovered in 1990. Two elements were discovered in 1994. They were Darmstadtium (atomic number 110) and Roentgenium (atomic number 111). Copernicium was discovered in 1996 and Fleroovium was discovered in 1999.
Darmstadtium is not magnetic.
Darmstadtium has not uses.
Darmstadtium was named after the city of Darmstadt in Germany where it was discovered. It was first synthesized at the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Darmstadt in 1994. The name was officially recognized by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry in 2003.
The texture of darmstadtium is not known.
Darmstadtium has no uses.
Darmstadtium has no uses.
The appearance of darmstadtium is not known.
Darmstadtium has no uses.