They have same atomic number
Chemical reactions involve electrons - not protons or neutrons. All isotopes of the same element have an identical number of electrons (just the number of neutrons differs) and hence the chemical properties are identical/very similar.
Yes.
Radiotracers have the same chemical properties to the stable isotopes of an element.
Chemical properties of a element is governed by ELECTRONIC CONFIGURATION of that element. As isotopes of same element have identical electronic configurations, their chemical properties are same.
They have all the chemical, physical, nuclear properties identical. This is not the case for isotopes.
Chemical reactions involve electrons - not protons or neutrons. All isotopes of the same element have an identical number of electrons (just the number of neutrons differs) and hence the chemical properties are identical/very similar.
The number of electrons in isotopes is identical.
Isotopes are forming and canging...
All the isotopes of a chemical element are identical; some differences exist for light elements (ex. H or D).
Yes.
All isotopes of a substance are chemically the same. It is their physical properties which are different.
Radiotracers have the same chemical properties to the stable isotopes of an element.
because chemical reactions rely on the donation, acceptance and/or sharing of electrons - if the number of electrons remains the same, the chemical behavior tends to remain the same (and isotopes of the same element will all have the same number of electrons and valence shell occupations).
In his time were not known the isotopes and Dalton supposed that all atoms of a chemical element are identical.
The number of protons and electrons is identical.
Chemical properties of a element is governed by ELECTRONIC CONFIGURATION of that element. As isotopes of same element have identical electronic configurations, their chemical properties are same.
They have all the chemical, physical, nuclear properties identical. This is not the case for isotopes.