KUNST
SCHÖNHEIT & WELLNESS
HANDWERK
KULTUR & GESCHICHTE
UNTERHALTUNG
UMFELD
ESSEN & GETRÄNKE
GRÜNE ZUKUNFT
REVERSE ENGINEERING
WISSENSCHAFTEN
SPORT
TECHNOLOGIE
WEARABLES

Understanding Thorium from Monazite — The Nuclear Fuel That Could Replace Uranium
Fortgeschritten
Anweisungen
1
1
Understand Thorium's Discovery
Understand Thorium's Discovery
Jöns Jacob Berzelius discovered thorium in 1828 in a black mineral sent to him by Reverend Hans Morten Thrane Esmark, who found it on the island of Løvøya, Norway. Berzelius named it after Thor, the Norse god of thunder. The mineral was later named thorite (ThSiO₄). Thorium's radioactivity was discovered independently by Gerhard Carl Schmidt and Marie Curie in 1898, making it the second radioactive element identified after uranium.
2
2
Identify Thorium in Monazite Sands
Identify Thorium in Monazite Sands
Thorium occurs at 9.6 ppm in Earth's crust — three to four times more abundant than uranium. Monazite (Ce,La,Nd,Th)PO₄ contains 5-12% thorium oxide, making it the primary thorium mineral. Heavy mineral sands in India, Brazil, Australia, and the United States contain monazite as a byproduct of titanium and zirconium mining. India holds the world's largest thorium reserves — estimated at 846,000 tonnes — concentrated in beach sands along the Kerala coast.
Benötigte Werkzeuge:
Hand Lens (10x Magnification)3
3
Examine the Gas Mantle Revolution
Examine the Gas Mantle Revolution
Thorium's first major application was the Welsbach gas mantle, invented by Carl Auer von Welsbach in 1891. A cotton mesh soaked in 99% thorium oxide and 1% cerium oxide produces brilliant white light when heated by a gas flame. Gas mantles illuminated the world before electric lighting became widespread. Billions were manufactured between 1890 and 1930. Thorium mantles are still used today in camping lanterns, where they produce bright light from propane or kerosene.
4
4
Understand the Thorium Fuel Cycle
Understand the Thorium Fuel Cycle
Thorium-232 itself is not fissile — it cannot sustain a chain reaction. However, when bombarded with neutrons, Th-232 absorbs a neutron and transforms through protactinium-233 to uranium-233, which IS fissile. This breeding process means thorium can serve as nuclear fuel: a thorium reactor uses a small amount of fissile material (U-235 or Pu-239) to start the reaction, then breeds U-233 from thorium to sustain it indefinitely.
5
5
Compare Thorium and Uranium Nuclear Cycles
Compare Thorium and Uranium Nuclear Cycles
The thorium fuel cycle has several advantages over uranium: thorium is 3-4 times more abundant, the thorium cycle produces far less plutonium (reducing weapons proliferation risk), and it generates fewer long-lived radioactive waste products. Molten salt thorium reactors (MSRs) operate at atmospheric pressure — eliminating the risk of pressure-driven explosions like Fukushima. India's three-stage nuclear program plans to use thorium as its primary fuel to leverage enormous domestic reserves.
6
6
Examine Thorium's Radioactivity
Examine Thorium's Radioactivity
Thorium-232 has a half-life of 14.05 billion years — three times the age of the Earth — making it only weakly radioactive. Its activity is 4,000 Bq per gram, compared to 12,400 Bq/g for natural uranium. Thorium decays through a chain of 10 radioactive daughters before reaching stable lead-208. The intermediate products include radium-228 and the gaseous radon-220 (thoron), which has a half-life of only 55.6 seconds — too short to accumulate like radon-222 from uranium decay.
7
7
Survey Industrial Applications
Survey Industrial Applications
Thoriated tungsten (W-2%ThO₂) electrodes are the preferred choice for TIG welding because thorium oxide improves electron emission, arc starting, and arc stability. Thorium oxide has the highest melting point of any oxide (3,300°C) and is used in high-temperature crucibles and furnace linings. Thorium-doped glass has a high refractive index and low dispersion, making it valuable for camera lenses — Canon's legendary 50mm f/1.2 lens used thoriated glass elements.
8
8
Examine Metal Properties
Examine Metal Properties
Thorium is a soft, silvery-white metal that is paramagnetic and moderately dense (11.7 g/cm³). Melting point is 1,750°C. It is relatively reactive — slowly tarnishing in air and dissolving in hydrochloric acid. Thorium is dimorphic: face-centered cubic below 1,360°C and body-centered cubic above. The metal is obtained by calcium reduction of thorium tetrafluoride (ThF₄). Thorium powder is pyrophoric and was once used in magnesium alloys for aircraft applications.
9
9
Understand Thorium Dating Methods
Understand Thorium Dating Methods
Uranium-thorium dating uses the decay of U-234 to Th-230 (half-life 75,380 years) to date calcium carbonate materials from 1,000 to 500,000 years old — filling the gap between radiocarbon (50,000 years) and potassium-argon (100,000+ years) dating. It is the primary method for dating cave stalagmites, coral reefs, and travertine deposits. U-Th dating of cave art at Altamira and Chauvet has revealed paintings up to 65,000 years old.
Benötigte Werkzeuge:
Precision Scale (0.01g)10
10
Document Findings and Future Energy Potential
Document Findings and Future Energy Potential
Record thorium's key data: atomic number 90, density 11.7 g/cm³, melting point 1,750°C, soft silvery metal. Thorium represents perhaps the most promising untapped energy resource on Earth. India, China, and several startup companies are actively developing thorium molten salt reactors. If successful, thorium could provide clean energy for thousands of years using fuel far more abundant than uranium. The element named after the god of thunder may yet power civilization's future.
Benötigte Werkzeuge
2- Platzhalter
- Platzhalter
Materialien verbundener Blueprints
Extracting Iron from Hematite — Bloomery Smelting from Ore to Bloomvon Peter
Understanding Gadolinium from Monazite — The MRI Contrast Agent Metalvon Peter
Understanding Samarium from Monazite — The First Rare Earth Magnetvon Peter
Understanding Helium from Natural Gas — The Element That Escapes Earth Forevervon Peter
Understanding Polonium from Uranium Ore — The Deadly Discovery That Launched Nuclear Sciencevon Peter
Understanding Astatine from Cyclotron Synthesis — The Rarest Naturally Occurring Elementvon Peter
Understanding Radon from Radioactive Decay — The Invisible Killer in Your Basementvon Peter
Understanding Francium from Radioactive Decay — The Most Unstable Natural Elementvon Peter
Understanding Radium from Uranium Ore — The Glowing Element That Changed Science and Medicinevon Peter
Understanding Actinium from Uranium Ore — The Element That Named the Actinidesvon Peter
Understanding Protactinium from Uranium Ore — The Elusive Parent of Actiniumvon Peter
CC0 Gemeinfrei
Dieser Blueprint ist unter CC0 veröffentlicht. Sie dürfen dieses Werk für jeden Zweck frei kopieren, ändern, verbreiten und verwenden, ohne um Erlaubnis zu fragen.
Unterstützen Sie den Maker, indem Sie Produkte über seinen Blueprint kaufen, wo er eine Maker-Provision von Anbietern festgelegt, verdient. Oder erstellen Sie eine neue Iteration dieses Blueprints und verbinden Sie ihn in Ihrem eigenen Blueprint, um Einnahmen zu teilen.