Isotopes of hafnium


Natural hafnium consists of five observationally stable isotopes and one very long-lived radioisotope, 174Hf, with a half-life of years. The next most stable radioisotope is 182Hf with a half-life of 8.90 million years, an extinct radionuclide used in hafnium–tungsten dating to study the chronology of planetary differentiation.
Other isotopes have been synthesized running from 153Hf to 192Hf, but none of the 33 others has a half-life over 1.87 years, and most have half-lives under five minutes. There are also at least 41 nuclear isomers, the most stable of which is 178m2Hf with a half-life of 31 years. All isotopes of hafnium are either radioactive or observationally stable, meaning that they are predicted to be radioactive but no actual decay has been observed.