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Hassium

Hassium () is a synthetic with 108, positioned in group 8, period 7 of the periodic table as a member of the transactinide series and the third in the 6d series. It is highly radioactive, with no isotopes, and exists only in trace amounts produced in particle accelerators through reactions. As one of the heaviest elements whose chemical properties have been experimentally investigated, hassium provides key insights into the behavior of superheavy elements, where relativistic effects on electrons influence bonding and reactivity. Recent studies (as of 2025) on even heavier elements like continue to build on these foundational investigations. The element was first synthesized on March 14, 1984, by a team led by Peter Armbruster and Gottfried Münzenberg at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI) in Darmstadt, West Germany (now Germany), using the SHIP velocity filter to separate fusion products from the collision of iron-58 ions with a lead-208 target, producing the isotope hassium-265 via the reaction ^{208}\mathrm{Pb} + ^{58}\mathrm{Fe} \to ^{265}\mathrm{Hs} + n. This marked the first confirmed observation of element 108, identified through a chain of alpha decays leading to known isotopes of lighter elements. Subsequent experiments at GSI confirmed additional isotopes and refined production methods, including the use of curium-248 targets with magnesium-26 projectiles to generate hassium-269 and hassium-270. The name "hassium" derives from Hassia, the Latin name for the German state of , honoring the location of its discovery at GSI in . Initially, there was controversy over naming, with a 1994 IUPAC commission proposing "hahnium" to honor , but after review of discovery credits, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) officially approved "hassium" with symbol Hs in 1997 as part of its recommendations for transfermium elements. Hassium has 13 known isotopes (including isomers), with mass numbers ranging from 263 to 277, all highly unstable and decaying primarily by alpha emission or ; the longest-lived confirmed isotope is ^{270}Hs, with a of about 4–8 seconds, though ^{271}Hs may have a longer of around 46 seconds (tentative as of 2025). Experimental chemical studies, limited to just a handful of atoms, demonstrate that hassium exhibits group 8 behavior akin to and , forming a volatile tetroxide (likely HsO_4) under oxidative conditions, with adsorption enthalpies on surfaces matching those of , thus validating periodic table extrapolations despite relativistic influences. No macroscopic quantities or practical applications exist due to its extreme instability and production challenges, but ongoing research at facilities like GSI and others explores its nuclear structure to probe the "" for superheavy elements.

Introduction

General characteristics

Hassium is a synthetic with the 108 and Hs. Positioned in group 8, period 7, and the d-block of the periodic table, it is classified as a transactinide , extending the series of transition metals beyond . The of hassium is predicted to be [\mathrm{Rn}] \, 5f^{14} \, 6d^6 \, 7s^2, reflecting relativistic effects that influence the electronic structure of superheavy s. Hassium has 13 known isotopes ranging from mass numbers 263 to 277, including isomers; the most stable known isotope is ^{271}\mathrm{Hs}, with a half-life of about 46 seconds through alpha decay. Other isotopes, such as ^{270}\mathrm{Hs} with a half-life of about 7.6 seconds and ^{269}\mathrm{Hs} with about 13 seconds, decay similarly rapidly by alpha emission to seaborgium isotopes. Hassium's extreme rarity underscores its laboratory origins; more than 100 atoms have been synthesized as of 2024, primarily through heavy-ion fusion reactions at facilities like GSI Helmholtz Centre. This scarcity limits direct study but informs models of nuclear stability in the regime.

Role in superheavy element research

Hassium, with 108, serves as a critical benchmark in the exploration of , conventionally defined as those beyond Z=103, where nuclear forces compete intensely with repulsion. Its synthesis marked an early success in extending the periodic table into this regime, enabling experimental probes of nuclear behavior under extreme proton excess. Studies of hassium have significantly advanced understanding of nuclear effects, which arise from quantized arrangements that enhance binding energies at specific ". Theoretical calculations indicate a proton subshell near =108, contributing to increased stability against in neutron-rich isotopes around N=162. This , predicted by macroscopic-microscopic models, helps validate relativistic mean-field theories that describe structures in heavy nuclei. Hassium's research also informs predictions of the "," a hypothetical of enhanced longevity for nuclei centered around Z=114–126 and N=184, where multiple closures could yield half-lives extending to seconds or longer. By examining hassium isotopes approaching these neutron numbers, such as the doubly ^{270}Hs (Z=108, N=162), experiments test the onset of these stabilizing effects and refine extrapolations toward the island. Despite these insights, hassium investigations are hampered by its isotopes' brief half-lives, often milliseconds to seconds, and production yields limited to a few atoms per experiment due to cross-sections below 1 picobarn. These constraints demand specialized facilities, including high-intensity heavy-ion accelerators like GSI's UNILAC, which provides beams of up to 10^{12} particles per second for target bombardment.

History and Discovery

Initial synthesis attempts

The initial synthesis of hassium (element 108), temporarily named unniloctium, was claimed in 1984 by a team at the in , , led by Gottfried Münzenberg and Peter Armbruster. Using the approach, they bombarded a ^{208} target with ^{58}Fe projectiles, producing three atoms of the isotope ^{265} via the ^{208}Pb(^{58}Fe, n)^{265}Hs at an energy of 18 ± 2 MeV. Identification relied on observing chains with an alpha energy of 10.36 ± 0.03 MeV and a of 1.8^{+1}{-0.7} ms, genetically linked to the known decays of ^{261}{106} and ^{257}_{104}Rf. Subsequent experiments at GSI through 1986 expanded production to other isotopes, including ^{264}Hs and further instances of ^{265}Hs. The even-even isotope ^{264}Hs was synthesized in one observed using ^{207}Pb(^{58}Fe, n)^{264}Hs, decaying primarily by alpha emission at 10.59 ± 0.05 MeV with a of 0.39^{+0.34}_{-0.14} ms, alongside a single . These runs confirmed the alpha decay mode for both isotopes and provided initial insights into their decay properties, though yields remained limited to single atoms or small numbers. These pioneering efforts faced significant challenges due to the extremely low production cross-sections, measured at approximately 19^{+19}_{-10} picobarns for ^{265}Hs, which required extended periods and high-intensity beams to detect . Additionally, the necessity of single-atom-at-a-time demanded advanced techniques, such as the velocity filter SHIP for separating fusion products and real-time correlation of sequential alpha decays and implantations, amid short isotopic half-lives on the millisecond scale that limited observation windows.

Confirmation and arbitration

The synthesis of hassium was verified through a series of experiments in the , with the GSI team in , , providing independent confirmation in 1994 by repeating the cold fusion reaction ^{208}Pb(^{58}Fe, n)^{265}Hs to produce additional chains and observing genetic links from element 110 decays (e.g., ^{269}110 → ^{265}Hs), which corroborated its nuclear properties. This work built on GSI's initial 1984 report and helped establish the of hassium production at the facility. Meanwhile, claims from the (JINR) in , —in 1978, 1983, and 1984, based on the reaction ^{136}Xe + ^{136}Xe—failed to be independently reproduced, as subsequent attempts did not yield consistent genetic links in chains. Priority disputes over the discovery arose due to overlapping efforts between GSI and JINR, prompting . In 1997, a of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) and the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP), known as the Transfermium , reviewed the evidence and concluded that GSI's 1984 experiment unequivocally demonstrated the synthesis of element 108 through the detection of three decay chains from ^{265}Hs. The commission acknowledged JINR's parallel investigations but deemed their data insufficient for discovery credit owing to limited detail and lack of confirmation. This decision formally recognized GSI's team, led by Peter Armbruster and Gottfried Münzenberg, as the discoverers. Subsequent experiments in the 2000s at other facilities further solidified hassium's status. At in , researchers produced the new ^{263}Hs in 2008 using the ^{206}Pb(^{58}Fe, n)^{263}Hs, observing its into known isotopes and confirming decay patterns consistent with prior GSI results. Similarly, at (LBNL) in the United States, the ^{263}Hs was synthesized in 2009 via ^{208}Pb(^{56}Fe, n)^{263}Hs, with six correlated decay chains providing robust independent verification of hassium's nuclear characteristics. These efforts not only replicated key production methods but also expanded knowledge of hassium's isotopic landscape, removing any lingering doubts about element 108.

Naming process

The naming of hassium took place during the "," a period of international disputes over the discovery credits and nomenclature for superheavy elements beyond (atomic number 100), involving competing teams from the , , and . To resolve these conflicts and prevent nationalistic naming, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) prioritized honoring the institutions where the elements were undisputedly synthesized. The German team at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research) in first expressed their intent to name element 108 "hassium" in 1992, deriving the name from the Latin "Hassia," referring to the state of , , home to their facility. This proposal aimed to recognize the location of the breakthrough synthesis achieved in 1984 by Peter Armbruster and Gottfried Münzenberg. In contrast, a 1994 provisional IUPAC recommendation suggested "hahnium" (symbol Hn) for element 108, honoring German chemist , as part of a set of contested names intended to balance international contributions but criticized for overlooking specific discoverers. Following arbitration by the IUPAC Transfermium Working Group, which confirmed the GSI team's priority in the , the name "hassium" was formally proposed and accepted to avoid further disputes over names like "hahnium," which had been rejected for elements 105 and 108 to promote neutrality. The IUPAC Commission on Nomenclature of approved "hassium" (symbol Hs) at its August 1996 meeting in , aligning with traditions of geographic naming, and this was ratified in the official 1997 recommendations published in Pure and Applied Chemistry. The adoption emphasized the uncontested nature of the GSI synthesis and marked the end of naming controversies for element 108.

Synthesis Methods

Cold fusion reactions

Cold fusion reactions represent the principal approach for synthesizing hassium, leveraging the fusion of heavy target nuclei with medium-mass projectiles to form a compound at low excitation energies, thereby enhancing the probability of neutron evaporation over . These reactions exploit the doubly nature of the ^{208}Pb target to minimize the and promote compact fusion. The canonical reaction for hassium production is ^{208}\mathrm{Pb} + ^{58}\mathrm{Fe} \to ^{266}\mathrm{Hs}^{*} \to ^{265}\mathrm{Hs} + n (1n channel) or ^{264}\mathrm{Hs} + 2n (2n channel), with possible evaporation of up to a few additional neutrons in higher excitation scenarios. This process occurs at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI) in Darmstadt, Germany, where the Universal Linear Accelerator (UNILAC) delivers ^{58}Fe beams at energies of approximately 4.5-5.5 MeV/u to a ^{208}Pb target, optimized near the Bass interaction barrier to balance fusion probability and survival yield. The initial synthesis in 1984 produced three atoms of ^{265}Hs via this route, confirming the reaction's viability. The measured cross section for the 1n is approximately 20 , and for the 2n about 2.8 , underscoring the challenges in production due to competition from quasi-fission and incomplete processes. These values were determined through function measurements at GSI's SHIP velocity filter, which separates evaporation residues for further analysis.

Hot fusion reactions

Hot reactions provide an alternative method for synthesizing hassium, using targets and lighter projectiles to access more neutron-rich isotopes, though with higher energies leading to increased fission competition. These reactions typically yield cross sections on the order of a few picobarns and are performed at facilities like GSI and the (JINR). A key reaction is ^{248}\mathrm{Cm} + ^{26}\mathrm{Mg} \to ^{274}\mathrm{Hs}^{} \to ^{269}\mathrm{Hs} + 5n or ^{270}\mathrm{Hs} + 4n, optimized at beam energies around 8 MeV/u. This route was used in 2002 to produce seven atoms of ^{269}Hs and ^{270}Hs at GSI for the first chemical studies of hassium, with calculated cross sections of about 4 pb for ^{270}Hs and 6 pb for ^{269}Hs. More recently, in 2023, the isotope ^{272}Hs was synthesized at JINR's Superheavy Element Factory using the reaction ^{238}\mathrm{U} + ^{34}\mathrm{S} \to ^{272}\mathrm{Hs}^{}, demonstrating ongoing advancements in hot fusion techniques for elements.

Detection and decay analysis

Hassium atoms produced in fusion-evaporation reactions are isolated from the intense beam of projectiles and scattered target atoms using gas-filled recoil separators, such as the Separator for Heavy Ion Reaction Products (SHIP) at the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in , . These devices exploit the magnetic rigidity of the heavy evaporation residues, which travel at velocities of about 5-10% of the , to separate them from lighter particles within microseconds after formation; the residues are then implanted into a position-sensitive detector array for subsequent . Detection of hassium relies primarily on the observation of correlated alpha decay chains, where the implantation of a single hassium nucleus is followed by sequential alpha emissions from the parent and daughter nuclides, allowing genetic linkage through time and position correlations in the detector. For instance, the isotope ^{269}\Hs decays via alpha emission to ^{265}\Sg with an energy of approximately 9.23 MeV, followed by further alpha decays to ^{261}\Rf and subsequent daughters, often terminating in spontaneous fission. These alpha particles are measured using silicon detectors with high energy resolution (typically 20-30 keV full width at half maximum), enabling precise spectroscopy to distinguish the decay signatures from background events. Given the extremely low cross-sections (on the order of picobarns), hassium synthesis yields only a few atoms per experiment, necessitating single- analysis where each observed serves as an independent data point. Confirmation of hassium's identification requires the repeated observation of identical sequences across multiple independent experiments, ensuring statistical reliability and ruling out random coincidences, with background rates minimized to less than 10^{-4} s per hour per detector through shielding and systems.

Isotopes

Known isotopes and production

Hassium has 13 confirmed isotopes with mass numbers from 263 to 277, including up to six isomers, all produced artificially in heavy-ion reactions due to the element's complete absence in . These isotopes are highly neutron-deficient and unstable, with production primarily occurring via methods at the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research, where beams of iron or isotopes are accelerated onto lead or targets, followed by neutron evaporation from the excited compound nucleus. For instance, the neutron-deficient ^{265}Hs is synthesized in the 1n evaporation channel of the reaction ^{208}Pb(^{58}Fe,1n)^{265}Hs, marking the initial of the element. Other isotopes in this range, such as ^{263}Hs, ^{264}Hs, ^{266}Hs, ^{267}Hs, ^{268}Hs, ^{269}Hs, and ^{270}Hs, have been observed in similar channels (e.g., 3n to 0n evaporation), with cross-sections typically in the picobarn range, allowing for the detection of only a few atoms per experiment. As of 2025, over 130 hassium atoms have been produced across all isotopes, primarily through at GSI but with recent contributions from hot fusion reactions and at the (JINR), enabling detailed studies of their nuclear properties despite low yields. Heavier isotopes such as ^{271}Hs (via ^{248}Cm(^{26}Mg,3n)), ^{272}Hs, ^{273}Hs, ^{275}Hs, and ^{277}Hs have been identified in hot fusion experiments, for example, as in channels of ^{232}Th + ^{48}Ca at JINR's Superheavy Element Factory. Recent discoveries have extended the known isotopic range using these methods: in 2023, the ^{272}Hs was identified as a in the 4n channel of the reaction ^{232}Th + ^{48}Ca (yielding ^{276}Ds), with a measured production cross-section of approximately 250 pb and detection of three atoms. In 2024, the long-lived metastable ^{269m}Hs, with a of 2.8 s, was observed in the of ^{273}Ds produced via the same ^{232}Th + ^{48}Ca reaction, providing new insights into isomeric states in nuclei.

Decay properties and chains

All known isotopes of hassium undergo radioactive decay predominantly via alpha emission, reflecting the high fission barriers and repulsion in these nuclei; spontaneous fission branches are observed in several cases, but no or has been detected. Half-lives span from sub-millisecond for the lightest isotopes to nearly a minute for those near the neutron-rich deformed closure at N=162, indicating enhanced in the mid-mass region around A≈270–271. This trend aligns with theoretical predictions of a deformed doubly magic configuration at 270Hs, where increased suppresses decay rates. Representative examples illustrate these properties. The isotope ^{269}Hs, produced in fusion reactions such as ^{26}Mg + ^{248}Cm, has a half-life of 13^{+10}{-4} s and decays almost entirely by alpha emission with an energy of 9.34 MeV to ^{265}Sg. Similarly, ^{270}Hs exhibits a half-life of 7.6 \pm 4.9 s and Q\alpha = 9.07 MeV, decaying to ^{266}Sg, which frequently branches to spontaneous fission with a half-life of approximately 1.2 s. The most stable known isotope, ^{271}Hs, achieves a half-life of 46^{+56}{-16} s through alpha decay (Q\alpha \approx 9.48 MeV) to ^{267}Sg, with a spontaneous fission branch limited to less than 15%. Lighter isotopes, such as ^{263}Hs, are far less stable, with a half-life of 0.74 \pm 0.48 ms and higher alpha energy of 10.73 MeV leading to ^{259}Rf. Decay chains for hassium isotopes typically consist of 3–5 successive alpha decays, linking to known daughters in , , , and , before terminating in or long-lived actinides. For instance, a chain initiated by ^{268}Hs proceeds via ( 0.4 \pm 0.2 , Q_\alpha = 9.62 MeV) to ^{264}, which has a 30% SF branch ( 0.39^{+0.34}_{-0.14} ) or alpha decays further to ^{260} (half-life 15 ms) and subsequent daughters. These chains, genetically correlated by time and position in detectors, provide critical confirmation of isotope assignments and reveal systematic decreases in alpha energies along the sequence, consistent with Q-value .

Occurrence

Terrestrial absence

Hassium exhibits complete terrestrial absence as a primordial element, owing to the extreme instability of its isotopes. All known isotopes of hassium have half-lives ranging from microseconds to about 22 seconds for the longest confirmed isotope, ^{270}Hs, precluding any survival from the formation of Earth approximately 4.54 billion years ago. A single unconfirmed observation suggests a spontaneous fission half-life of ~11 minutes for ^{277}Hs, but even this would result in over 10^{14} half-lives elapsed since planetary formation and thus total decay of any initial inventory. Geochemical searches for superheavy elements, including hassium, in diverse terrestrial samples such as ores, minerals, and heavy metal concentrates (e.g., mercury, thallium, lead, and bismuth) have established stringent upper limits on their abundance. These limits are below 10^{-12} g/g throughout the Earth's crust, corresponding to negligible atomic concentrations far below detectable levels. Investigations of potential production sites, including the Oklo natural nuclear reactor in Gabon—where uranium fission occurred about 2 billion years ago—have yielded no evidence of superheavy elements beyond atomic number 100, with hassium precluded by its rapid decay even if transiently formed. Similarly, cosmic ray spallation in the atmosphere and meteoritic material has not produced or preserved superheavy nuclei, with upper limits below 10^{-12} g/g in chondrites confirming non-detection. The consistent failure to detect hassium or related superheavy elements in natural samples underscores its exclusively synthetic origin, with no viable geochemical or pathways sustaining its presence on . These null results from tracking, alpha spectrometry, and mass analyses reinforce the understanding that hassium's instability renders it undetectable and absent in the terrestrial environment.

Astrophysical formation

Hassium, with 108, is theoretically produced in astrophysical environments through the rapid neutron-capture process (r-process), where seed nuclei rapidly capture neutrons in high-flux conditions, followed by beta decays to form heavier elements. This process is hypothesized to occur primarily in mergers, where the collision of compact objects ejects neutron-rich material, enabling the synthesis of superheavy nuclei up to Z ≈ 110. Explosive in core-collapse supernovae has also been proposed as a potential site, though simulations indicate it may be less efficient for elements beyond A ≈ 130 due to insufficient neutron availability. In neutron star mergers, such as the observed event , the dynamic ejecta and neutrino-driven winds provide the extreme conditions—a neutron-to-seed of approximately —necessary for r-process pathways to reach superheavy elements like hassium. Models based on the extended Thomas-Fermi-Strutinsky (ETFSI) framework predict that the r-process can extend to mass numbers A > 270, potentially forming hassium isotopes in the neutron-rich region of the nuclear chart. However, barriers and subsequent neutron-induced limit the survival of these nuclei, with only trace amounts expected in the heavy-element-rich ejecta. Despite these predictions, no direct observational for hassium or other superheavy elements from astrophysical sources has been found, as searches in cosmic rays, terrestrial samples, and stellar spectra yield no confirmed signatures. Theoretical models suggest that hassium isotopes near the —particularly those in the β-stability valley—could have half-lives up to ~10^8 years, allowing potential persistence in metal-poor stars or the early Solar System, though rapid dominates for most predicted yields. Ongoing simulations and observations of kilonovae continue to refine these estimates, emphasizing the role of data uncertainties in assessing feasibility.

Predicted Properties

Physical and atomic characteristics

Hassium's atomic structure is described by the electronic configuration [Rn] 5f^{14} 6d^6 7s^2, consistent with its position in group 8 of the periodic table. This configuration arises from relativistic stabilization of the 7s orbital and destabilization of the 6d orbitals, influencing the element's overall atomic properties. Theoretical calculations using relativistic (DFT) predict an of approximately 126 pm for hassium, reflecting the contraction due to relativistic effects in superheavy s. The first is estimated at ~733 kJ/mol, lower than expected for lighter homologues due to these relativistic influences on binding. Macroscopic physical properties of hassium have been extrapolated from DFT models, yielding a predicted of ~41 g/cm³, making it one of the densest s. Hassium is expected to exhibit refractory metal behavior similar to .

Chemical behavior

Hassium is predicted to belong to group 8 of the periodic table, exhibiting chemical properties akin to its homologues iron, ruthenium, and osmium, with a preference for high oxidation states due to its d-block electron configuration. Theoretical calculations indicate that the +8 oxidation state is expected to be the most stable for hassium, similar to osmium, where it readily forms the volatile tetroxide OsO₄; accordingly, hassium is predicted to form HsO₄, a highly volatile compound suitable for gas-phase studies. This +8 state aligns with experimental observations confirming hassium's reactivity toward oxygen, producing a tetroxide with adsorption behavior comparable to OsO₄. In group 8, the stability of the +8 in tetroxides increases down the group: iron forms unstable FeO₄²⁻ species, while and yield stable, volatile RuO₄ and OsO₄, respectively, and hassium is forecasted to follow this trend with a stable HsO₄ of similar to OsO₄, with a of approximately 60 kJ/mol. Beyond oxides, theoretical models predict hassium's potential to form organometallic compounds, including hassocene, Hs(C₈H₈)₂, as a to in iron chemistry, reflecting similar bonding capabilities in group 8 elements.

Relativistic influences

In hassium, relativistic effects arise from the high charge (Z = 108), causing inner electrons to approach relativistic velocities, which in turn influences the orbitals through scalar relativistic and spin-orbit . The 7s orbital experiences significant stabilization due to increased effective and relativistic mass increase of the electrons, while the 6d orbitals are destabilized, with the 6d_{3/2} level splitting further from the 6d_{5/2} due to spin-orbit interaction. This orbital reconfiguration leads to enhanced s-d hybridization and overall contraction of the near the , resulting in shorter interatomic bonds in hassium compounds compared to lighter homologs like , and a predicted exceeding 40 g/cm³ for metallic hassium—substantially higher than non-relativistic estimates. For example, in hassium tetroxide (HsO₄), relativistic calculations predict bond lengths shortened by approximately 0.1 relative to non-relativistic models, strengthening the M-O bonds. The destabilization of the 6d orbitals reduces the in hassium compounds, lowering atomization energies and thereby enhancing relative to non-relativistic predictions; this effect is particularly notable in the metallic state and oxides, where spin-orbit splitting weakens . In contrast, for HsO₄ specifically, relativistic strengthening of bonds slightly reduces compared to , but the compound remains highly volatile overall, facilitating gas-phase transport in experiments. Predicted electronic transitions in gaseous HsO₄ are blue-shifted due to the contracted orbitals, suggesting a more intense yellow color than the pale yellow of OsO₄.

Experimental Chemistry

Early volatility studies

The first experimental investigation of hassium's chemical properties was conducted at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI) in , , in 2002, focusing on its in the gas to assess its placement in group 8 of the periodic table. Hassium isotopes ^{269}Hs and ^{270}Hs were produced via the fusion reaction ^{248}Cm(^{26}Mg,5n/4n) using a rotating target wheel bombarded by a magnesium beam, yielding cross-sections on the order of picobarns and resulting in only seven detected hassium atoms over the course of the experiment. These hassium atoms were immediately oxidized in a helium-oxygen gas mixture (1% O_2) within the In situ Volatilization and On-line Detection (IVO) setup, forming a highly volatile species presumed to be hassium tetroxide (HsO_4), which was transported through a heated column maintained at 600°C. The volatile HsO_4 was then separated and directed to the On-Line Detector (), a thermochromatographic where it adsorbed onto a silicon nitride surface along a from -20°C to -170°C, allowing measurement of adsorption behavior through subsequent detection. This process confirmed efficient transport of hassium as an oxide, with no evidence of less volatile dominating. The volatility of HsO_4 was found to be similar to that of its lighter homolog (OsO_4), as evidenced by comparable adsorption enthalpies: ΔH_{ads} = -46 ± 2 kJ/mol for HsO_4 versus -39 ± 1 kJ/mol for OsO_4, and deposition temperature maxima of -44 ± 6°C for HsO_4 compared to -82 ± 7°C for OsO_4. This alignment supported predictions of hassium's homology to , indicating group 8 congeners' characteristic formation of volatile tetroxides under oxidative conditions, though relativistic effects were anticipated to slightly reduce HsO_4's volatility relative to OsO_4. Due to the extremely low production rates (5-10 atoms total), no bulk compound was isolated, and the study served primarily as proof-of-principle for gas-phase chemistry.

Recent compound investigations

Following the foundational volatility studies of the early 2000s, advancements in hassium chemistry since 2010 have primarily involved preparatory and theoretical efforts rather than new experimental data, due to the element's low production rates of only a few atoms per experiment and half-lives on the order of seconds. A notable development was the adaptation of the (Short-lived Isotopes Studied in the SISAK system) continuous liquid-liquid extraction apparatus for potential studies of hassium tetroxide (HsO₄), aimed at probing its solubility and reactivity in organic solvents like diisobutyl ketone. This system was successfully tested with homologs, achieving high separation efficiencies (>95%) for OsO₄, but could not be applied to hassium owing to the limited number of available atoms—typically fewer than 10 per irradiation campaign at GSI. Between 2011 and 2016, theoretical calculations further validated hassium's chemical homology to , predicting similar volatility for oxides but highlighting relativistic effects that could weaken bonds in potential s. These predictions supported exploratory concepts for hydride formation using reactive gases like H₂ or HCl in gas-phase setups, analogous to methods used for , but no experimental attempts were executed for hassium during this period. No hassium atoms have been allocated for chemical investigations since 2016, as resources at GSI were redirected toward facility upgrades, including the new HELIAC linear accelerator, which was commissioned in 2024, to boost beam intensities for production. As a result, relies on the 2002 confirmation of HsO₄ as the only experimentally observed compound, with its adsorption enthalpy on measured at −46 ± 2 kJ/mol, comparable to OsO₄ (−39 ± 1 kJ/mol). As of 2025, no additional hassium compounds have been confirmed, underscoring persistent challenges in single-atom . Looking ahead, planned experiments at GSI's TASCA separator and collaborations with Dubna's Flerov Laboratory aim to employ matrix isolation techniques, embedding atoms in inert matrices (e.g., or at cryogenic temperatures) to prolong observation times and enable spectroscopic characterization of compounds like potential hydrides or halides. These methods, already demonstrated for lighter transactinides, promise to bridge the gap between theory and experiment for hassium and beyond, with initial tests expected post-HELIAC commissioning in the late .

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