Plutonium is an artificial element; traces (extremely low) of plutonium isotopes of natural origin exist in uranium ores. Plutonium is used in nuclear weapons and nuclear fuels.
There's no plutonium here. I haven't even seen any plutonium, recently.
That may be a difficult question if you are referring to what contains plutonium then nuclear bombs and missiles contain plutonium
Plutonium a very explosive element.
Plutonium has the same composition as uranium, except for the fact that it contains one more neutron and one more proton. Actually Plutonium-239 has 2 more protons and 2 more neutrons than Uranium-235.
Plutonium is a reactive metal and can react with the majority of other chemical elements: hydrogen, oxygen, halogens, carbon, sulfur, nitrogen, selenium, boron, phosphorous, silicon, etc.
Some plutonium chemical compounds; plutonium dioxide, plutonium nitride, plutonium carbide, plutonium nitrate, plutonium trifluoride, plutonium chloride, etc.
Number of moles = mass / molar mass, so the answer is the one with the greatest molar mass. This is plutonium.
Examples are: plutonium metal, isotope Pu-238, plutonium dioxide, plutonium sulfide, plutonium nitrate, plutonium carbide etc.
Examples: PuO2, plutonium nitrate, plutonium carbide, plutonium chloride, plutonium fluoride etc.
Plutonium chemical properties:- plutonium is a reactive metal: the Pauling electronegativity is 1,28- plutonium is flammable- plutonium has six allotropes- plutonium in compounds has valences from 2 to 7- plutonium is very toxic
Pure plutonium contain only plutonium atoms.
Plutonium is only paramagnetic.