Seaborgium

TRANSITION METAL · GROUP 6 · PERIOD 7
106
Sg
Seaborgium
269

Atomic Data

Atomic Number106
SymbolSg
Atomic Weight269 u
Density (STP)N/A
Melting PointN/A °C (None K)
Boiling PointN/A °C (None K)
Electronegativity
Electron Config.1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d10 4s2 4p6 4d10 4f14 5s2 5p6 5d10 5f14 6s2 6p6 6d4 7s2
Oxidation States+6
Phase at STPSolid
CategoryTransition Metal
Period / Group7 / 6
CAS Number54038-81-2

Electron Configuration

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[Rn] 5f14 6d4 7s2

Shell n Subshell Electrons Cumulative
K11s22
L22s24
L22p610
M33s212
M33p618
M33d1028
N44s230
N44p636
N44d1046
N44f1460
O55s262
O55p668
O55d1078
O55f1492
P66s294
P66p6100
P66d4104
Q77s2106
Total 106 106

Isotopes of Seaborgium

Seaborgium has two naturally occurring stable isotopes. The most abundant is ²⁶⁹Sg, comprising None% of all naturally occurring Seaborgium.

Isotope Symbol Protons Neutrons Abundance Stability
Seaborgium-269²⁶⁹Sg106163traceStable
Seaborgium-271²⁷¹Sg106165traceStable

Abundance & Occurrence

Seaborgium is present in Earth's crust at approximately trace amounts by mass and at approximately trace amounts by mass throughout the universe.

Earth's Crust (ppm by mass)

Seaborgium
None ppm
Silicon (ref.)
277,000 ppm
Oxygen (ref.)
461,000 ppm

Universe (ppm by mass)

Seaborgium
None ppm
Helium (ref.)
230,000 ppm
Hydrogen (ref.)
739,000 ppm

Discovery & History

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Safety & Handling

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Real-World Uses

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Downloadable Resources

Free periodic table reference sheets for classrooms, study sessions, and laboratory use.

Frequently Asked Questions

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