Francium has approx. 40 isotopes and nuclear isomers.
The atomic number of francium is 87. This means that it has 87 each of protons and electrons. The number of neutrons depends on the isotope, but the most common one, Fr-223, has 223 - 87 = 136 neutrons. (The number of neutrons is always the isotope mass number minus the atomic number.)
Each isotope has another half life.For the isotope francium-223 (half life = 21,8 minutes) the time is 87,2 minutes.
For the isotope francium-223 this mass is 167,25 g.
Francium has 87 protons; the number of neutrons is different for each isotope and francium has approx. 40 isotopes and isomers. Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of the isotope - 87
The most stable francium isotope (Fr-223) has 87 protons and 136 neutrons.
Francium has no stable isotopes. That means it doesn't really have a "most abundant" isotope; they're all pretty much nonexistent. There are trace amounts of 223Fr in uranium minerals, because it's a decay product of 227Ac (which is itself a decay product in the decay chain of uranium).
Francium-223 decay to radium-223; each isotope have another type of decay.
Francium has 87 protons and electrons; the number of neutrons is different for each isotope and francium has ca. 40 isotopes ad isomers. Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of the isotope - 87
Francium has 87 protons and electrons; the number of neutrons is different for each isotope and francium has ca. 40 isotopes ad isomers. Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of the isotope - 87
The correct symbol of this isotope is 223Fr.
Francium has 87 positively charged protons and 87 negatively charged electrons, plus a varying number of uncharged neutrons, of which 136 is the commonest amount. Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of the isotope - 87
Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of the isotope - 87