Isotopes of yttrium
Yttrium (atomic number 39) has 34 known isotopes with mass numbers ranging from 76 to 109, of which only yttrium-89 is stable and makes up 100% of naturally occurring yttrium.[1] All other isotopes of yttrium are radioactive, with half-lives spanning from microseconds for the lightest and heaviest nuclides to over 100 days for the longest-lived ones.[1] The stable isotope ^{89}Y has a nuclear spin of 1/2 and is monoisotopic, meaning it is the sole contributor to the standard atomic weight of yttrium (88.90584 u). Neutron-deficient isotopes, such as those from ^{76}Y to ^{88}Y, primarily decay via electron capture or beta-plus emission, while neutron-rich isotopes from ^{90}Y to ^{109}Y decay predominantly by beta-minus emission.[1] The most stable radioisotopes are ^{88}Y, with a half-life of 106.63(3) days decaying by electron capture to stable ^{88}Sr, and ^{91}Y, with a half-life of 58.51(6) days undergoing beta-minus decay to ^{91}Zr.[1] Among the radioactive isotopes, ^{90}Y is particularly notable for its applications in medicine, where it serves as a beta-emitting radionuclide in radioembolization therapies for treating liver cancers such as hepatocellular carcinoma, often delivered via yttrium-90-loaded microspheres.[2][3] Its half-life of 64.05(7) hours and high-energy beta emissions (maximum 2.282 MeV) make it suitable for targeted internal radiation while minimizing damage to surrounding healthy tissue. Other isotopes, like ^{86}Y and ^{87}Y, find use in nuclear medicine imaging and research due to their positron emission properties.Overview
General characteristics
Yttrium, with atomic number 39, has 33 known radioactive isotopes ranging from ^{76}Y to ^{109}Y (excluding the stable ^{89}Y), plus the stable ^{89}Y, totaling 34 isotopes excluding nuclear isomers. ^{89}Y is the sole naturally occurring isotope of yttrium.[1] The general nuclear structure of yttrium isotopes is influenced by the odd number of protons (Z = 39), which limits the number of stable isotopes to just one; elements with odd atomic numbers typically exhibit fewer stable isotopes due to reduced binding energy from the absence of proton pairing compared to even-Z nuclei. Most yttrium isotopes are unstable primarily because of an imbalance in the proton-neutron ratio, causing them to undergo radioactive decay to achieve greater stability.[4] Common decay modes for yttrium isotopes depend on their neutron content: neutron-rich isotopes (those with mass numbers greater than 89) predominantly decay via beta minus (β⁻) emission, while proton-rich isotopes (mass numbers less than 89) typically undergo electron capture (EC) or beta plus (β⁺) decay. The half-lives of these radioactive isotopes generally span from microseconds to over 100 days. Qualitatively, the binding energy per nucleon in yttrium isotopes trends toward a peak around mass number A = 89, aligning with the exceptional stability of the ^{89}Y nucleus.Natural occurrence and abundance
Yttrium occurs naturally in the Earth's crust primarily in association with rare earth elements, found in minerals such as monazite, xenotime, and bastnäsite, with an average crustal abundance of about 30 ppm.[5] The element exists exclusively as the stable isotope ^{89}Y, which constitutes 100% of naturally occurring yttrium, reflecting its monoisotopic nature among primordial elements.[6] No other stable isotopes are present, and primordial radioactive isotopes of yttrium are absent in significant quantities, as their half-lives are too short to persist from nucleosynthetic origins.[7] The isotopic purity of natural yttrium is confirmed through high-precision mass spectrometry, particularly inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), applied to yttrium extracted from accessory minerals like monazite and xenotime. These techniques measure isotopic ratios with uncertainties below 0.1%, revealing no deviations from 100% ^{89}Y in terrestrial samples, even at trace levels in geochemical reservoirs.[8] Such analyses also account for potential anthropogenic or cosmogenic interferences, ensuring the dominance of ^{89}Y in natural settings. Cosmically, yttrium isotopes, dominated by ^{89}Y, are synthesized mainly via the slow neutron-capture process (s-process) in the helium-burning shells of asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars. Stellar nucleosynthesis models of low-mass AGB stars (1.5–3 M_⊙) predict that the s-process accounts for approximately 83% of the solar system's ^{89}Y abundance, with yields contributing 0.1–1% to the overall production of heavy elements (Z > 30) in these stars.[9] This production occurs during thermal pulses, where neutron densities enable sequential captures leading to yttrium's formation near the first s-process peak.Stable isotopes
Properties of yttrium-89
Yttrium-89 (^89Y) is the sole stable isotope of yttrium, comprising 39 protons and 50 neutrons, with the latter representing a magic neutron number that enhances nuclear stability through a closed subshell configuration. Its atomic mass is precisely 88.9058479(25) u, reflecting the tightly bound nucleus.[10] The ground-state nuclear spin and parity are I^π = 1/2^+, consistent with the odd-proton configuration in the Z=39 shell.[11] As a stable nuclide, ^89Y exhibits no radioactive decay and possesses an infinite half-life. The total nuclear binding energy is 775.538(2) MeV, yielding an average binding energy per nucleon of approximately 8.71 MeV, which underscores the relative stability of this mid-mass nucleus compared to lighter or heavier isotopes.[11] Experimental determinations of nuclear structure parameters include the root-mean-square charge radius, measured at 4.2430(21) fm via electron scattering and muonic atom spectroscopy, providing insight into the spatial distribution of protons.[12] The electric quadrupole moment of the ground state is zero, as expected for a spin-1/2 nucleus lacking a permanent quadrupole deformation.[13] Commercial yttrium metal, derived from natural sources, achieves isotopic purity exceeding 99.9% for ^89Y, owing to its exclusive natural occurrence as this monoisotopic form with 100% abundance.[10]Primordial origin
The stable isotope ^{89}Y is primarily synthesized through the slow neutron capture process (s-process) in the helium intershell regions of low-mass asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars during their thermal pulsation phases, where neutrons from the ^{13}C(α,n)^{16}O reaction enable sequential captures on lighter seed nuclei. These evolved red giant stars contribute the majority of s-process elements in this mass range, with ^{89}Y forming near the neutron magic number N=50, creating a bottleneck at nearby ^{88}Sr that influences the flow toward heavier isotopes. A secondary contribution arises from the weak s-process in massive stars (>8 M_⊙), occurring during convective core helium burning, where neutrons from the ^{22}Ne(α,n)^{25}Mg reaction produce a portion of isotopes up to A≈90, including ^{89}Y.[14][15] The rapid neutron capture process (r-process), dominant for heavier elements, yields no significant amount of ^{89}Y due to its position (A=89) in the valley following the first r-process abundance peak near A≈82, where neutron-rich waiting-point nuclei like ^{80}Zn and ^{82}Ge accumulate, resulting in low residual yields for nearby masses in solar-system compositions. Primordial ^{89}Y from these stellar sites was ejected into the interstellar medium via AGB stellar winds and supernova explosions of massive stars, mixing into the presolar molecular cloud and incorporating into the Solar System nebula approximately 4.6 billion years ago; it constitutes 100% of natural yttrium abundance. During Earth's accretion, ^{89}Y arrived primarily through chondritic meteorites and planetesimals, reflecting the bulk solar composition. Geochemically, ^{89}Y fractionates similarly to heavy rare earth elements (HREE) such as dysprosium and ytterbium, due to comparable ionic radii and charge density, leading to its relative enrichment in the continental crust (≈30–40 ppm) compared to the primitive mantle (≈4 ppm) through partial melting and magmatic differentiation processes that favor HREE compatibility in residual phases like garnet. This behavior concentrates ^{89}Y in rare earth ores, including xenotime (YPO_4) and gadolinite, often associated with granitic pegmatites and carbonatites.[16]Radioactive isotopes
Long-lived isotopes
The long-lived radioactive isotopes of yttrium, defined here as those with half-lives exceeding one day, include ^{88}Y, ^{91}Y, and ^{87}Y, each exhibiting distinct decay modes reflective of their position relative to the stable ^{89}Y isotope. These isotopes are produced primarily through nuclear reactions or as byproducts of fission processes, and their nuclear properties facilitate applications such as tracing in geochemical studies.[17][18][19] ^{88}Y, with a half-life of 106.63 days, undergoes primarily electron capture (99.3%) with a minor β^+ branch (0.7%) to the daughter ^{88}Sr, releasing a total decay energy of 3.623 MeV. This proton-rich isotope populates excited states in ^{88}Sr, leading to low-intensity gamma emissions such as the 1836 keV line (99.3% intensity) and 898 keV line (91%), though the overall gamma yield is modulated by the dominant electron capture pathway. It is typically produced via charged-particle reactions on strontium targets, such as proton irradiation of enriched ^{88}Sr.[20][21][17] On the neutron-rich side, ^{91}Y has a half-life of 58.51 days and decays exclusively by β^- emission to ^{91}Zr with a Q-value of 1.544 MeV, resulting in a pure beta spectrum without associated gamma rays. This isotope is a notable fission product in uranium-235 thermal neutron fission, with a cumulative yield of approximately 5.8%, and it participates in decay chains involving other neutron-rich species like ^{91}Sr. Its properties make it suitable as a radiotracer for studying fission product separation and environmental transport, as demonstrated in rapid isolation techniques from mixed fission debris.[18][22] Another example is ^{87}Y, with a half-life of 79.8 hours, which decays by electron capture to ^{87}Sr (Q-value 1.862 MeV), populating low-lying excited states and emitting gamma rays at 388.5 keV (84%) and 484.8 keV (100%). This proton-rich nuclide is generated through reactions like (p,γ) on ^{86}Sr or spallation processes. Overall, yttrium's long-lived isotopes on the neutron-rich flank, such as ^{91}Y, arise predominantly from fission and contribute to the extended decay chains in nuclear waste, contrasting with the prompt decay of shorter-lived species.[19]Short-lived isotopes
The short-lived isotopes of yttrium encompass a broad range of synthetic nuclides, spanning proton-rich species with mass numbers as low as A=78 to neutron-rich ones up to A=108 and beyond, all characterized by half-lives ranging from milliseconds to several seconds. These isotopes do not occur naturally and are produced exclusively through artificial means, primarily via high-energy particle accelerators that facilitate reactions such as projectile fragmentation or multinucleon transfer. Their fleeting existence makes them valuable for probing nuclear structure, including shell effects and deformation in regions far from stability, where decay spectroscopy reveals details like level schemes and transition strengths.[23] Proton-rich yttrium isotopes, such as ^{80}Y with a half-life of 30.1 s decaying primarily by β⁺ emission (and electron capture) to ^{80}Sr, exemplify the dominance of positron emission and electron capture in this sector, driven by the excess of protons relative to the stable ^{89}Y core. These decays often involve high-energy β particles, with endpoint energies exceeding 5 MeV in some cases, and occasional proton emission in the most extreme cases like ^{78}Y (0.06 s half-life, β⁺ and p decay). Experimental studies using facilities like the NSCL at Michigan State University have assigned spin-parity values, such as (1/2⁻) for the ground state of ^{85}Y (half-life 2.68 h, serving as a benchmark for nearby short-lived analogs), highlighting high-spin isomers and quadrupole moments that inform models of nuclear collectivity.[23][24][25] On the neutron-rich side, isotopes like ^{97}Y (3.75 s half-life, β⁻ decay to ^{97}Zr with a minor β⁻n branch) undergo primarily β⁻ decay, releasing electrons with energies up to ~6.7 MeV, often populating excited states in zirconium daughters for gamma-ray analysis. Heavier examples, such as ^{108}Y (~20 ms half-life, β⁻ and possible minor α decay contributions in the heaviest cases), exhibit even shorter lifetimes and β-delayed neutron emission, reflecting the increasing neutron excess and potential for fission-like processes. These nuclides, studied in accelerator experiments at GSI and RIKEN, provide insights into the astrophysical r-process and neutron skin effects, with spin-parity assignments like (5/2⁺) for ground states in mid-mass examples aiding in validating theoretical frameworks such as the Nilsson model. No α decay dominates in lighter short-lived yttrium isotopes, but it becomes relevant for A > 100 in transient species.[23][24][26]| Representative Short-Lived Yttrium Isotopes | Half-Life | Primary Decay Mode(s) | Daughter Nuclide(s) | Notes (e.g., Spin-Parity) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ^{78}Y | 0.06 s | β⁺, p | ^{78}Sr | Proton-rich extreme; accelerator-produced |
| ^{80}Y | 30.1 s | β⁺, EC | ^{80}Sr | High-energy β; J^π = 4⁻ |
| ^{85}Y | 2.68 h | β⁺, EC | ^{85}Sr | J^π = (1/2⁻); structure studies |
| ^{97}Y | 3.75 s | β⁻, β⁻n (minor) | ^{97}Zr, ^{96}Zr | Neutron-rich; β endpoint ~6.7 MeV |
| ^{108}Y | 20 ms | β⁻ | ^{108}Zr | Very short; possible α branch in analogs |