On the Varieties of Water

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On the Varieties of Heavy Water

As many people know, there is more than one type of water. For example, the term “heavy water” often refers specifically to D2O, with “semi-heavy water” referring to DOH. Add tritium to the mix, and the new combinations possible — all radioactive — include HOT, DOT, and T2O. Along with diprotium oxide, plain old H2O, that’s six isotopic variants of this one simple compound.

However, that six needs to be multiplied by three. Why? Because there’s one set of six that includes an oxygen-16 atom (the usual kind), and another six for oxygen-17, and one more for oxygen-18, for a total of eighteen. So far. Both oxygen-17 and -18 are stable, and occur in nature, although they are both of very low abundance.

Eighteen kinds of water, half of them radioactive? No, that’s not quite enough. If the radioactive isotope of hydrogen is included, then so should be the radioisotopes of oxygen. That would include oxygen isotopes with mass numbers from 13 to 15 (add three more sets of six, or 18, which, when added to the original 18, gives a running total of 36), and 19 to 24 (add six more sets of six, or 36 more, to the 36 we just had, and we’re now at 72).

To leave it at 72 isotopic varieties of water is not necessary, but it is reasonable. Yes, there is oxygen-26, but with an estimated half-life of 40 nanoseconds, it isn’t reasonable to expect there to be time for it to form a water molecule. Could it happen? Possibly — but it’s extremely unlikely to ever be observed. For oxygen-12, the story is similar, but with an even shorter nuclide-lifetime than that of O-26.

Additional isotopes of hydrogen have also been detected, with mass numbers from 4 to 7, but they decay even more quickly than O-26 as well.

72 it is, then, counting nothing with a half-life under a millisecond. This is the sort of thing that happens when math compulsives think about chemistry a bit too long.