Template talk:Infobox iron

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Semi-protected edit request on 15 March 2016[edit]

I'm just you everyday chemist. That means I don't do nuclear chem every day so I'm not super 100% on what Iron-54 decays into, but Double electron capture sounds right and that means the product would be Chromium-54. But this says it Double beta decay and I know thats not possible... let me check something. No I know I'm right I just found a paper about it. Any who this is what you got.

|- ! style="text-align:right;" | 54Fe | style="text-align:right;" | 5.8% | style="text-align:right;" | >3.1×1022 y | (β+β+) | style="text-align:right;" | 54Cr


I this is what you should change it to. I've also changed the Decay energy to what the source says.

|- ! style="text-align:right;" | 54Fe | style="text-align:right;" | 5.8% | style="text-align:right;" | >3.1×1022 y | εε[1] | style="text-align:right;" | 54Cr


Thndsley (talk) 12:31, 15 March 2016 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ Bikit, I, Krmar, M., Slivka, J., Anicin, I., Veskovic, M., & Convie, L. (1994). Neutrinoless double electron capture decay of 54-Fe. 6 International Symposium on Radiation Physics (ISRP-6), Morocco (https://inis.iaea.org/search/searchsinglerecord.aspx?recordsFor=SingleRecord&RN=27066909)
Yes check.svg DoneSkyllfully (talk | contribs) 19:36, 20 March 2016 (UTC)