Polonium

Agent Name
Polonium
CAS Number
7440-08-6
Formula
Po
Major Category
Physical/Radiation
Category
Radionuclides
Description
All isotopes are radioactive; Resembles tellurium and bismuth chemically; Melting point = 254 degrees C. [Merck Index # 7561]
Sources/Uses
Occurs naturally as decay product of uranium-238 (0.1 mg of Po-210 per ton of uranium ore); Used in static eliminators to remove static electricity from machinery and dust from photographic film and camera lenses; Used with beryllium as a neutron source; [Argonne] Tobacco smoke contains Polonium-210 and lead-210. Smoking 1.5 packs of cigarettes per day delivers about 16,000 mrems/year to the lungs. [ATSDR Case Studies: Ionizing Radiation]
Comments
Most Important Radionuclide: Polonium-210
Source: Bombard bismuth-209 with neutrons in nuclear reactor; then beta decay of Bi-210;
Half-Life: 138 days
Effective Half-Life: 46 days
Specific Activity: 4500 Ci/gm
Decay Mode: Alpha
GI Absorption: 10-50%
Lung Clearance Half-Time: Weeks for oxides, hydroxides, and nitrates; Days for all other compounds;
Critical Organ: Spleen
Internal Toxicity: Very High
Annual Limit on Intake: 0.0006 mCi
Radiation Energy (MeV): Alpha 5.305 (100%) + daughters;
Reported Major Radiation Accidents: One homicide from acute radiation poisoning and several possible exposures after the Millennium Hotel Pine Bar in London, UK was contaminated on October 31, November 1, or November 2, 2006. [www.bt.cdc.gov] Two people had significant exposures in 1961;
[See Glossary for references.] See "Radiation, ionizing."
Reference Link #1
Biomedical References

Diseases, Processes, and Activities Linked to This Agent

Activities

Activities with risk of exposure: