Hydrogen
is the most abundant element in the universe. About half the mass of
sun and stars is due to hydrogen. Jupiter and Saturn planets consist
mainly of hydrogen. It is common on earth in water, coal, petroleum,
clay, animal and vegetable matter that constitutes 0.9% by weight of
Earth's crust. It is the ninth element in order of abundance.
Tritium
Isotopes of hydrogen
Isotopes
are the different forms of the same element, which have the same atomic
number but different mass numbers. The isotopes of hydrogen are
protium, deuterium and tritium with mass number 1, 2 and 3 respectively.
The relative abundance of three isotopes in nature is in the ratio of 1
: 1.5 x 10-2: 1 x 10-17respectively.
The hydrogen occurring in nature is mainly composed of atoms of protium
and it contains only 0.015% of deuterium atoms. The third isotope of
hydrogen is radioactive.
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