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MURR Becomes First Reactor Facility to Join DOE’s Isotope Program
DOE and MURR partner to ensure scientists have access to essential research isotopes.
DOE and MURR partner to ensure scientists have access to essential research isotopes.
Researchers succeed in producing larger quantities of a long-lived radioisotope that generates the needed isotope on demand.
New element 117 and its decay products establish the existence of long-sought Island of Stability.
Researchers harvest long-lived isotopes that are difficult or impossible to acquire otherwise.
Lead and bismuth systems are being produced to fill the nation’s need for short-lived, alpha-emitting isotopes.
Investigators at the University of Washington have developed methods that consistently provide high production and recovery yields of astatine-211.
Researchers from Los Alamos National Laboratory and the University of Missouri have designed a new source of a valuable imaging isotope.
The DOE Isotope Program restores an important inventory of the radioisotope silicon-32 (Si-32).
Brookhaven’s large proton linear accelerator is able to produce medically useful radioisotopes not available elsewhere.
High yield production of Actinium-225 and Radium-223 achieved by high energy proton bombardment of natural thorium targets.