Solubility of Sucrose Ethanol - Nuclear Chemistry Topics - Non-Elaborate Posts - Post 2


Usage of a bit of a parallel post

So, if we treat “room temperature” in nuclear terms as ground state (no external high energy input), many isotopes that are theoretically possible are not “soluble” in the sense that they do not exist stably — they decay too fast, or require too much energy to produce. Only certain “soluble” isotopes appear naturally or can be synthesized and persist.

Similarly, increasing “temperature” or energy (in chemistry, heat; in nuclear, neutron flux, high energy collisions, or high excitation) can allow less stable isotopes to form or persist temporarily. As temperature helps solute dissolve more, energy inputs allow nuclear reactions to create isotopes that wouldn't exist at room, ambient nuclear conditions.


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