Cl 塩素 17 35.453 17 3 p 17 -101.0 -34.6 [Ne] 3s2 3p5 2 8 7 0.00321 0.017% Yellow Orthorhombic 3.2 2.869 {"1":"1251.2","2":"2298","3":"3822","4":"5158.6","5":"6542","6":"9362","7":"11018","8":"33604","9":"38600","10":"43961","11":"51068","12":"57119","13":"63363","14":"72341","15":"78095","16":"352994","17":"380760"} 1255 349 99 -1 0.97 18.7 3.21 10.2 0.48 0.0089 0 Gas, Diamagnetic, Insulator, Halogen, Nonmetal, Stable, Natural KLOR-een Greenish-yellow, disagreeable gas. Never found in free form in nature. Used in water purification, bleaches, acids and many, many other compounds such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFC). Salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) is its most common compound. Commercial quantities are produced by electrolysis of aqueous sodium chloride (seawater or brine from salt mines). BXCfBl4rmh0 Chlorine
Ununquadium (Uuq) was the temporary IUPAC systematic element name.
In 1998, a team led by Yuri Oganessian and Vladimir Utyonkov at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Dubna produced flerovium by bombarding plutonium with calcium.
In an experiment lasting 40 days, 5 x 1018 atoms of calcium to be fired at plutonium to produce a single atom of flerovium. Named after the founder of the Flerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions, the Soviet physicist Georgy Flyorov 17 1774 Carl William Scheele Sweden From the Greek word "chloros" meaning "pale green"