relationship between atomic binding energy and atomic number
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Binding energy for atoms. The binding energy of an atom (including its electrons) is not the same as the binding energy of the atom's nucleus. The measured mass deficits of isotopes are always listed as massdeficits of the neutral atoms of that isotope, and mostly in MeV.
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The amount of energy released when a nucleus forms from its component nucleons is the nuclear binding energy (Figure 19.1. ... 2, the binding energy per nucleon increases rapidly with increasing atomic number until about Z = 26, where it levels off to about 8–9 MeV per nucleon and then decreases slowly.
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