CERIUM


Meaning of CERIUM in English

(Ce), chemical element, most abundant of the rare-earth metals of transition Group IIIb of the periodic table. Cerium is iron gray in colour and about as soft and ductile as tin. It oxidizes slowly in air, rapidly reacts with water to yield hydrogen, and burns brilliantly when heated. Cerium as the oxide (ceria) was discovered (1803) by Jns Jacob Berzelius and Wilhelm Hisinger working together, and independently by Martin Klaproth. It was named after the asteroid Ceres, which was discovered in 1801. Ceria, the second rare earth to be discovered (yttria was first), turned out to be a mixture of oxides from which seven elements were separated during the course of the next century. These other elements were the lighter rare-earth metals, from lanthanum (atomic number 57) to gadolinium (atomic number 64), with the exception of promethium. Cerium occurs in monazite, bastnaesite, and many other minerals. It also is found among the fission products of uranium, plutonium, and thorium. Cerium is about as abundant as copper and nearly three times as abundant as lead in the igneous rocks of Earth's crust. Four stable isotopes occur in nature: cerium-140 (88.48 percent), cerium-142 (11.07 percent), cerium-138 (0.250 percent), and cerium-136 (0.193 percent). The metal itself is prepared by electrolysis of the anhydrous fused halides or by thermoreduction of the halides with alkali or alkaline-earth metals. It exists in four allotropic (structural) forms. Cerium and its compounds have a number of practical applications. The dioxide is employed in the optics industry for fine polishing of glass (replacing rouge); it is also used as an opacifier in porcelain coatings and as a decolorizer in glass manufacturing. Cerium nitrate has been used in the manufacture of incandescent-gas mantles; other salts are employed in the ceramic, photographic, and textile industries. The metal serves as an ingredient in the carbon-impregnated arc lamps that have been used for illumination in the motion-picture, television, and related industries. Together with the other rare-earth metals, cerium is a constituent of numerous ferrous and nonferrous alloys; a superior high-temperature alloy for jet engines contains about 3 percent cerium with magnesium. Misch metal (50 percent cerium) is used for cigarette-lighter flints, in tracer bullets, and in electron-tube manufacture as a getter, which removes traces of oxygen. Along with praseodymium and terbium, cerium is different from the other trivalent rare earths in that it forms compounds in which it is tetravalent; it is the only rare earth that exhibits a +4 oxidation state in solution. Tetravalent (ceric) salts, which are powerful but stable oxidizing agents, are used in analytical chemistry to determine oxidizable substances such as iron(II). Most cerium(IV) salts are orange to yellow in colour, as are solutions containing the Ce4+ ion. Cerium(III) behaves as a typical rare earth; its compounds are usually white. atomic number58 atomic weight140.120 melting point798 C boiling point3,257 C specific gravity6.771 (25 C) valence3, 4 electronic config. 2-8-18-20-8-2 or (Xe)4f 25d06s2

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