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Technetium, with the symbol Tc and atomic number 43, is a silvery-gray, radioactive transition metal. It is the lightest element with no stable isotopes and occurs only in trace amounts in nature. Technetium is mostly produced synthetically in nuclear reactors or particle accelerators, though trace quantities can arise from spontaneous fission of heavier elements. It was the first element to be artificially produced, identified in 1937 by Carlo Perrier and Emilio Segrè from irradiated molybdenum, and its name derives from the Greek technetos, meaning artificial.

The element has numerous radioactive isotopes, all unstable. The most widely used is technetium-99m, a metastable

Chemically, technetium exhibits a variety of oxidation states from -1 to +7 and forms compounds such as

Safety and regulation accompany its use, given its radioactivity and potential environmental mobility. Technetium remains a

isomer
with
a
half-life
of
about
six
hours,
fundamental
to
modern
diagnostic
medicine.
Technetium-99m
is
typically
supplied
to
clinics
from
molybdenum-99/tc-99m
generators,
where
the
parent
nuclide
decays
to
the
short-lived
metastable
state.
Other
technetium
isotopes
serve
in
research,
industry,
or
as
long-lived
beta
emitters
in
environmental
studies;
technetium-99,
for
example,
has
a
much
longer
half-life
and
is
a
concern
in
nuclear
waste
management
due
to
its
mobility
as
the
pertechnetate
ion.
oxides,
halides,
and
oxoanions
like
pertechnetate
(TcO4−).
It
tends
to
form
volatile
oxides
and
can
participate
in
coordination
chemistry
similar
to
other
transition
metals.
central
element
in
nuclear
medicine
and
radiochemical
research.