Dictionary Definition
hafnium n : a gray tetravalent metallic element
that resembles zirconium chemically and is found in zirconium
minerals; used in filaments for its ready emission of electrons
[syn: Hf, atomic
number 72]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Hafnium
English
Noun
- a metallic chemical element (symbol Hf) with an atomic number of 72.
Synonyms
- celtium (former name)
Derived terms
Translations
- Afrikaans: hafnium
- Albanian: hafnium
- Arabic: (háfniyum)
- Armenian: հաֆնիում (hafnium)
- Basque: hafnioa
- Belarusian: гафнiй (háfnij)
- Bosnian: hafnij
- Breton: hafniom
- Bulgarian: хафний (kháfnij)
- Catalan: hafni
- Chinese: 鉿 (jiá)
- Cornish: hafnyum
- Croatian: hafnij
- Czech: hafnium
- Danish: hafnium
- Dutch: hafnium
- Esperanto: hafnio
- Estonian: hafnium
- Faroese: hafnium
- Finnish: hafnium
- French: hafnium
- West Frisian: hafnium
- Friulian: afni
- Galician: hafnio
- Georgian: ჰაფნიუმი (hap‘niumi)
- German: Hafnium
- Greek, Modern: άφνιο (áfnio)
- Hebrew: הפניום (hafniyum)
- Hungarian: hafnium
- Icelandic: hafnín
- Irish: haifniam
- Italian: afnio
- Japanese: ハフニウム (hafuniumu)
- Kashmiri: hafen
- Kazakh: гафний (gafnii)
- Korean: 하프늄 (hapeunyum)
- Latin: hafnium
- Latvian: hafnijs
- Lithuanian: hafnis
- Luxembourgish: hafnium
- Macedonian: хафниум (kháfnium)
- Malay: hafnium
- Maltese: afniju
- Manx: hafnium
- Mongolian: гафни (gafni)
- Norwegian: hafnium
- Polish: hafn
- Portuguese: háfnio
- Romanian: hafniu
- Russian: гафний (gáfnij)
- Scottish Gaelic: haifniam
- Serbian: хафниjум (hafnijum)
- Slovak: hafnium
- Slovenian: hafnij
- Spanish: hafnio
- Swedish: hafnium
- Tajik: gafni'
- Tamil: ஹப்னியம் (hapniyam)
- Thai: (haefniam)
- Turkish: hafniyum
- Ukrainian: гафнiй (háfnij)
- Uzbek: гафний (gafniy)
- Vietnamese: hafini
- Welsh: haffniwm
External links
For more information refer to: http://elements.vanderkrogt.net/elem/hf.html (A lot of the translations were taken from that site with permission from the author)Estonian
Noun
Extensive Definition
Hafnium () is a chemical
element that has the symbol Hf
and atomic
number 72. A lustrous,
silvery gray tetravalent transition
metal, hafnium resembles zirconium chemically and it is
found in zirconium minerals. Hafnium is used in
tungsten alloys in filaments
and electrodes, in
integrated
circuits as a gate insulator for transistors, and as
a neutron absorber in
control
rods in nuclear
power plants.
Notable characteristics
Hafnium is a shiny silvery, ductile metal that is corrosion resistant and chemically similar to zirconium. The physical properties of hafnium are markedly affected by zirconium impurities, and these two elements are among the most difficult ones to separate. A notable physical difference between them is their density (zirconium being about half as dense as hafnium), but chemically the elements are extremely similar.The most notable physical property of hafnium is
that it has a very high neutron-capture cross-section, and nuclei
of several hafnium isotopes can each absorb multiple neutrons. This
makes hafnium a good material for use in the control rods
for nuclear
reactors. Its neutron-capture cross-section is about 600 times
that of zirconium's. (Other elements that are good
neutron-absorbers for control rods are cadmium and boron.)
Separation of hafnium and zirconium becomes very
important in the nuclear power industry, since zirconium is a good
fuel-rod cladding metal, with the desirable properties of a very
low neutron capture cross-section and good chemical stability at
high temperatures. However, because of hafnium's neutron-absorbing
properties, hafnium impurities in zirconium would cause it to be
far less useful for nuclear reactor applications. Thus a nearly
complete separation of zirconium and hafnium is necessary for their
use in nuclear power.
Hafnium
carbide is the most refractory
binary
compound known, with a melting
point over 3890 °C, and hafnium
nitride is the most refractory of all known metal nitrides, with a
melting
point of 3310 °C. This has led to
proposals that hafnium or its carbides might be useful as
construction materials that are subjected to very high
temperatures.
The metal is resistant to concentrated alkalis, but halogens react with it to form
hafnium tetrahalides. It is notable because it has the highest
excitation energy of any comparably long-lived isomer of any
element. One gram of pure Hf-178-m2 would contain approximately
1330 megajoules of energy, the equivalent of exploding about 317
kilograms (700 pounds) of TNT.
Possible applications requiring such highly concentrated energy
storage are of interest. For example, it has been studied as a
possible power source for gamma ray lasers.
Applications
Hafnium is used to make control rods for nuclear reactors because of its ability to absorb neutrons (its thermal neutron absorption cross section is nearly 600 times that of zirconium), excellent mechanical properties and exceptional corrosion-resistance properties.Other uses:
- In gas-filled and incandescent lamps, for scavenging oxygen and nitrogen,
- As the electrode in plasma cutting because of its ability to shed electrons into air,
- In iron, titanium, niobium, tantalum, and other metal alloys.
- A hafnium-based compound is employed in gate insulators in the 45 nm generation of integrated circuits from Intel, IBM and others . Hafnium oxide-based compounds are practical high-k dielectrics, allowing reduction of the gate leakage current which improves performance at such scales.
- DARPA has been intermittently funding programs in the US to determine the possibility of using a nuclear isomer of hafnium (the above mentioned Hf-178-m2) to construct small, high yield weapons with simple x-ray triggering mechanisms—an application of induced gamma emission. That work follows over two decades of basic research by an international community into the means for releasing the stored energy upon demand. There is considerable opposition to this program, both because the idea may not work, and because uninvolved countries might perceive an imagined "isomer weapon gap" that would justify their further development and stockpiling of conventional nuclear weapons. A related proposal is to use the same isomer to power Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, which could remain airborne for weeks at a time.
- Small additions of hafnium increase the adherence of protective oxide scales on nickel based alloys. It improves thereby the corrosion resistance especially under cyclic temperature conditions that tend to break oxide scales by inducing thermal stresses between the bulk material and the oxide layer.
History
The 1869 periodic table by Mendeleev
had implicitly
predicted the existence of a heavier analog of titanium and zirconium, but in 1871
Mendeleev placed lanthanum (element 57) in that
spot.
The existence of a gap in the periodic table for
a yet to be discovered element 72 was predicted by Henry
Moseley in 1914. Hafnium was named for the Latin name Hafnia for
"Copenhagen", the
home town of Niels Bohr. It
was discovered by Dirk Coster
and Georg von
Hevesy in 1923 in Copenhagen,
Denmark,
validating the original 1869 prediction of Mendeleev. Soon
thereafter, the new element was predicted to be associated with
zirconium by using the
Bohr theories of the atom, and it was finally found in zircon through X-ray spectroscopy analysis in
Norway.
Hafnium was separated from zirconium through
repeated recrystallization of the double ammonium or potassium fluorides by Jantzen
and von Hevesey. Metallic hafnium was first prepared by Anton
Eduard van Arkel and Jan Hendrik de Boer by passing hafnium
tetra-iodide vapor over a heated tungsten filament. This process
for differential purification of Zr and Hf is still in use
today.
The
Faculty of Science of the University
of Copenhagen uses in its seal a
stylized image of hafnium.
Occurrence
Hafnium is estimated to make up about 0.00058% of the Earth's upper crust by weight. It is found combined in natural zirconium compounds but it does not exist as a free element in nature. Minerals that contain zirconium, such as alvite [(Hf, Th, Zr)SiO4 H2O], thortveitite, and zircon (ZrSiO4), usually contain between 1 and 5% hafnium. Hafnium and zirconium have nearly identical chemistry, which makes the two difficult to separate. About half of all hafnium metal manufactured is produced as a by-product of zirconium refinement. This is done through reducing hafnium(IV) chloride with magnesium or sodium in the Kroll process.A major source of zircon (and hence hafnium) ores
are
heavy mineral sands ore deposits, pegmatites particularly in
Brazil and
Malawi, and
carbonatite
intrusions particularly the Crown Polymetallic Deposit at Mount
Weld, Western Australia. A potential source of hafnium is trachyte
tuffs containing rare zircon-hafnium silicates eudialyte or armostrongite, at
Dubbo in New
South Wales, Australia.
One chemist estimated in 2007 that at the current
rate of usage, the worlds supply of hafnium would be exhausted by
about the year 2017.
Precautions
Care needs to be taken when machining hafnium because, like its sister metal zirconium, when hafnium is divided into fine particles, it is pyrophoric and can ignite spontaneously in air (see Dragon's Breath for a demonstration). Compounds that contain this metal are rarely encountered by most people. The pure metal is not considered toxic, but hafnium compounds should be handled as if they are toxic because the ionic forms of metals are normally at greatest risk for toxicity, and limited animal testing has been done for hafnium compounds.Isotopes
Hafnium has five stable isotopes.References
Scerri, E.R., Prediction of the Nature of Hafnium
from Chemistry, Bohr’s Theory and Quantum Theory, Annals of
Science, 51, 137-150, (1994)
External links
- WebElements.com – Hafnium
- Hafnium Technical & Safety Data
- NLM Hazardous Substances Databank – Hafnium, elemental
- Intel Shifts from Silicon to Lift Chip Performance
- http://www.intel.com/technology/45nm/index.htm?iid=homepage+marquee_45nm
hafnium in Afrikaans: Hafnium
hafnium in Arabic: هافنيوم
hafnium in Bengali: হ্যাফনিয়াম
hafnium in Belarusian: Гафній
hafnium in Bosnian: Hafnijum
hafnium in Catalan: Hafni
hafnium in Czech: Hafnium
hafnium in Corsican: Afniu
hafnium in Danish: Hafnium
hafnium in German: Hafnium
hafnium in Estonian: Hafnium
hafnium in Modern Greek (1453-): Άφνιο
hafnium in Spanish: Hafnio
hafnium in Esperanto: Hafnio
hafnium in Basque: Hafnio
hafnium in Persian: هافنیوم
hafnium in French: Hafnium
hafnium in Friulian: Afni
hafnium in Manx: Hafnium
hafnium in Galician: Hafnio
hafnium in Korean: 하프늄
hafnium in Armenian: Հաֆնիում
hafnium in Croatian: Hafnij
hafnium in Ido: Hafnio
hafnium in Indonesian: Hafnium
hafnium in Icelandic: Hafnín
hafnium in Italian: Afnio
hafnium in Hebrew: הפניום
hafnium in Javanese: Hafnium
hafnium in Swahili (macrolanguage): Hafni
hafnium in Kurdish: Hafniyûm
hafnium in Latin: Hafnium
hafnium in Latvian: Hafnijs
hafnium in Luxembourgish: Hafnium
hafnium in Lithuanian: Hafnis
hafnium in Lojban: jinmrxafni
hafnium in Hungarian: Hafnium
hafnium in Malayalam: ഹാഫ്നിയം
hafnium in Marathi: हाफ्नियम
hafnium in Dutch: Hafnium
hafnium in Japanese: ハフニウム
hafnium in Norwegian: Hafnium
hafnium in Norwegian Nynorsk: Hafnium
hafnium in Low German: Hafnium
hafnium in Polish: Hafn
hafnium in Portuguese: Háfnio
hafnium in Russian: Гафний
hafnium in Albanian: Hafniumi
hafnium in Simple English: Hafnium
hafnium in Slovak: Hafnium
hafnium in Slovenian: Hafnij
hafnium in Serbian: Хафнијум
hafnium in Serbo-Croatian: Hafnijum
hafnium in Finnish: Hafnium
hafnium in Swedish: Hafnium
hafnium in Thai: แฮฟเนียม
hafnium in Turkish: Hafniyum
hafnium in Ukrainian: Гафній
hafnium in Chinese: 铪