IC 6667 Radium in Medical Use in the United States

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 14
- File Size:
- 602 KB
- Publication Date:
- Oct 1, 1932
Abstract
Radioactivity, the property of radium that led to its isolation more than 30 years ago,
is the characteristic that makes it of value in the treatment of disease. Tyler3 gives the
following brief history of the investigation:
The way to the discovery of radium was opened in 1895 by Rontgen, who found
that the glow from a Crooke's tube contained penetrating rays, which .he called X
rays. Prof. Henri Bequerel, while investigating the effect of various phosphor¬
escent substances, found that uranium salts produced photographic impressions
even when enveloped with opaque substances. To Marie Sklovouski, a young Polish
student, who later became Madame Curie, Professor Bacquerel delegated the task of
learning how and why uranium possessed power to emit these peculiar rays, which
he had proved to be electrical in character. Madam Curie, examining by electri¬
cal methods the radioactivity of a large number of minerals containing uranium
and thorium, discovered that some specimens of pitchblende had about four times
the activity of the metal uranium; that chalcolite, the crystallized phosphate of
copper and uranium, was twice as active as uranium; that autunite, a phosphate of
calcium and uranium, was quite as active as the same weight of pure uranium. In
order to check these discoveries, she prepared chalcolite artificially, starting
with pure products, but found that this artificial chalcolite had only the acti¬
vity represented by its composition, or, roughly, 40 per cent of the activity of
uranium. This led to the conclusion that there was some element or substance in
the residue from uranium minerals that possesses a high degree of activity. After
an exhaustive chemical investigation of pitchblende from Joachimsthal, she found
that this mineral contained not only uranium but also another radioactive sub¬
stance, to which she gave the name of polonium, in honor of her native land. Later
in 1898, Monsieur and Madame Curie found still another element, which, when brought
to a state of concentration, was several million times as active as uranium, and
to this was given the name of radium. Debierne afterwards found a fifth radio¬
active substance, actinium; and in 1906 Boltwood isolated the metal ionium. Strict¬
ly pure radium chloride was first produced in 1902.
The first radium was produced commercially from the uranium residues obtained from the
mines of Joachimsthal, Bohemia. Tyler calls to attention that, as the ores were a government
monopoly, search was begun at once for sources in other parts of the world. As a result,
radium-containing ores have been found in about 10 countries.
Citation
APA:
(1932) IC 6667 Radium in Medical Use in the United StatesMLA: IC 6667 Radium in Medical Use in the United States. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1932.