Np; at. no. 93; valence 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. First man-made transuranium element; no stable nuclides. Known isotopes (mass numbers): 227-242. Discovery of isotope 239 (T 1/2 2.355 days, β-decay, rel. at. mass 239.0529): E. McMillan, P. Abelson, Phys. Rev. 57, 1185 (1940); of isotope 237 (α-emitter, T 1/2 2.14 × 106 years, longest-lived known isotope, rel. at. mass 237.0482): A. C. Wahl, G. T. Seaborg, ibid. 73, 940 (1948). Prepn of metal: S. Fried, N. Davidson, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 70, 3539 (1948); L. B. Magnusson, T. J. LaChapelle, ibid. 3534. Presence in nature: Seaborg, Perlman, ibid. 70, 1571 (1948). Chemical properties: Seaborg, Wahl, ibid. 1128. Reviews: C. Keller, The Chemistry of the Transactinide Elements (Verlag Chemie, Weinheim, English Ed., 1971) pp 253-332; W. W. Schulz, G. E. Benedict, Neptunium-237; Production and Recovery, AEC Critical Review Series (USAEC, Washington, D.C., 1972) 85 pp; Comprehensive Inorganic Chemistry vol. 5, J. C. Bailar, Jr. et al., Eds. (Pergamon Press, Oxford, 1973) passim; J. A. Fahey in The Chemistry of the Actinide Elements vol. 1, J. J. Katz et al., Eds. (Chapman and Hall, New York, 1986) pp 443-498; G. T. Seaborg in Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology vol. 1 (Wiley-Interscience, New York, 4th ed., 1991) pp 412-444.