Groundbreaking work at two Department of Energy national laboratories has confirmed plutonium's
magnetism1, which scientists have long theorized but have never been able to experimentally observe. The advances that enabled the discovery hold great promise for materials, energy and
computing2 applications. Plutonium was first produced in 1940 and its
unstable3 nucleus4 allows it to undergo
fission5, making it useful for nuclear fuels as well as for nuclear weapons. Much less known, however, is that the electronic cloud surrounding the plutonium nucleus is equally unstable and makes plutonium the most electronically complex element in the periodic table, with
intriguingly6 intricate properties for a simple elemental metal.
While conventional theories have successfully explained plutonium's complex
structural7 properties, they also predict that plutonium should order magnetically. This is in
stark8 contrast with experiments, which had found no evidence for magnetic order in plutonium.
Finally, after seven decades, this scientific mystery on plutonium's "missing" magnetism has been resolved. Using
neutron9 scattering10, researchers from the Department of Energy's Los Alamos and Oak
Ridge11 (ORNL) national laboratories have made the first direct measurements of a unique characteristic of plutonium's fluctuating magnetism. In a recent paper in the journal Science Advances, Marc Janoschek from Los Alamos, the paper's lead scientist, explains that plutonium is not
devoid12 of magnetism, but in fact its magnetism is just in a constant state of
flux13, making it nearly impossible to detect.
"Plutonium sort of exists between two extremes in its electronic configuration--in what we call a quantum mechanical superposition," Janoschek said. "Think of the one extreme where the electrons are completely localized around the plutonium ion, which leads to a magnetic moment. But then the electrons go to the other extreme where they become delocalized and are no longer associated with the same ion anymore."