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Hafnium [Hf]
CAS-ID: 7440-58-6
An: 72 N: 106
Am: 178.49 g/mol
Group No: 4
Group Name: Transition metals
Block: d-block  Period: 6
State: solid at 298 K
Colour: grey steel Classification: Metallic
Boiling Point: 4876K (4603°C)
Melting Point: 2506K (2233°C)
Superconducting temperature: 0.128K (-273.022°C)
Density: 13.31g/cm3
Discovery Information
Who: Dirk Coster, George Hevesy
When: 1923
Where: Denmark
Name Origin
From Hafnia, the Latin name of Copenhagen.
 "Hafnium" in different languages.
Sources
Hafnium does not exist in nature in elemental form. Obtained from the minerals alvite ([(Hf, Th, Zr)SiO4.H2O]), thortveitite ((Sc,Y)2Si2O7) and zircon (ZrSiO4 which usually contain between 1 and 5% hafnium.
Abundance
 Universe: 0.0007 ppm (by weight)
 Sun: 0.001 ppm (by weight)
 Carbonaceous meteorite: 0.17 ppm
 Earth's Crust: 5.3 ppm
 Seawater: 7 x 10-6 ppm
Uses
Used in gas-filled and incandescent lamps, reactor control rods because of its ability to absorb neutrons also as a gas scavenger in vacuum tubes. Used as the electrode in plasma cutting because of its ability to shed electrons into air.
It is also used in iron, titanium, niobium, tantalum and other metal alloys.
History
The existence of a gap in the periodic table for an as-yet undiscovered element 72 was predicted by Henry Moseley in 1914. Hafnium (Latin Hafnia for "Copenhagen", the home town of Niels Bohr) was discovered by Dirk Coster and Georg von Hevesy in 1923 in Copenhagen, Denmark, validating the original 1869 prediction of Mendeleev. Soon after, the new element was predicted to be associated with zirconium by using the Bohr theory and was finally found in zircon through X-ray spectroscope analysis in Norway.
It was separated from zirconium through repeated recrystallization of double ammonium or potassium fluorides by Jantzen and von Hevesy. Metallic hafnium was first prepared by Anton Eduard van Arkel and Jan Hendrik de Boer by passing hafnium tetraiodide vapour over a heated tungsten filament. This process for differential purification of Zr and Hf is still in use today.
Notes
A man made radioactive element and the first transactinide element.
Hazards
Care needs to be taken when machining hafnium because when it is divided into fine particles, it is pyrophoric and can ignite spontaneously in air.
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