Dictionary Definition
tantalum n : a hard gray lustrous metallic
element that is highly corrosion-resistant; occurs in niobite and
fergusonite and tantalite [syn: Ta, atomic
number 73]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Alternative forms
- tantalium (obsolete)
Etymology
A word derived by Swedish chemist Anders Gustaf Ekeberg in 1802, from tantalus, named in honor of Tantalus.Noun
- A metallic chemical element (symbol Ta) with an atomic number of 73.
Derived terms
- eka-tantalum
- tantalate
- tantalian
- tantalic
- tantalous
- tantalum carbide
- tantalum dioxide
- tantalum lamp
- tantalum oxide
- tantalum pentachloride
- tantalum pentoxide
- tanteuxenite
Related terms
Translations
A metallic chemical element with an atomic
number of 73.
- Afrikaans: tantaal
- Albanian: tantal
- Arabic: (tantá:lum)
- Armenian: տանտալ (tantal)
- Basque: tantalioa
- Belarusian: тантал (tantál)
- Bosnian: tantal
- Breton: tantal
- Bulgarian: тантал (tantál)
- Catalan: tàntal
- Chinese: 鉭 (dàn)
- Cornish: tantalum
- Croatian: tantal
- Czech: tantal
- Danish: tantal
- Dutch: tantaal , tantalium
- Esperanto: tantalo
- Estonian: tantaal
- Faroese: tantal
- Finnish: tantaali
- French: tantale
- Friulian: tantali
- Gallegan: tántalo
- Georgian: ტანტალი (tantali)
- German: Tantal
- Greek, Modern: ταντάλιο (tandálio)
- Hebrew: טנטלום (tantálum)
- Hungarian: tantál
- Icelandic: tantal
- Irish: tantalam
- Italian: tantalio
- Japanese: タンタル (tantaru)
- Kashmiri: tantôl
- Kazakh: тантал (tantal)
- Korean: 탄탈 (tantal), 탄탈룸 (tantallum)
- Latin: tantalium
- Latvian: tantals
- Lithuanian: tantalas
- Luxembourgish: tantal
- Macedonian: тантал (tantál)
- Malay: tantalum
- Maltese: tantalju
- Manx: tantalum
- Mongolian: тантал (tantal)
- Norwegian: tantal
- Polish: tantal
- Portuguese: tântalo
- Romanian: tantal
- Russian: тантал (tantál)
- Scottish Gaelic: tantalam
- Serbian: тантал (tantal)
- Slovak: tantal
- Slovenian: tantal
- Spanish: tántalo
- Swedish: tantal
- Tajik: tantal
- Tamil: தந்தாலம் (tantālam)
- Thai: (thaentālam)
- Turkish: tantal
- Ukrainian: тантал (tantál)
- Uzbek: тантал (tantal)
- Vietnamese: tantali, tantan
- Welsh: tantalwm
- West Frisian: tantaal
References
External links
For more information refer to: http://elements.vanderkrogt.net/elem/ta.html (A lot of the translations were taken from that site with permission from the author)Extensive Definition
Tantalum () (formerly tantalium /tænˈtæliəm/) is a chemical
element with the symbol Ta and atomic
number 73. A rare, hard, blue-gray, lustrous,
transition
metal, tantalum is highly corrosion-resistant and occurs
naturally in the mineral
tantalite.
Characteristics
Tantalum is dark, dense, ductile, very hard, easily fabricated, and highly conductive of heat and electricity. The metal is renowned for its resistance to corrosion by acids; in fact, at temperatures below 150 °C tantalum is almost completely immune to attack by the normally aggressive aqua regia. It can be dissolved with hydrofluoric acid or acidic solutions containing the fluoride ion and sulfur trioxide, as well as with a solution of potassium hydroxide. Tantalum's high melting point of 3017 °C (boiling point 5458 °C) is exceeded only by tungsten and rhenium for metals, and carbon.Applications
The major use for tantalum, as the metal powder, is in the production of electronic components, mainly capacitors and some high-power resistors. Tantalum electrolytic capacitors exploit the tendency of tantalum to form a protective oxide surface layer, using tantalum powder, pressed into a pellet shape, as one "plate" of the capacitor, the oxide as the dielectric, and an electrolytic solution or conductive solid as the other "plate". Because the dielectric layer can be very thin (thinner than the similar layer in, for instance, an aluminium electrolytic capacitor), a high capacitance can be achieved in a small volume. Because of the size and weight advantages, tantalum capacitors are attractive for portable telephones, pagers, personal computers, and automotive electronics.Tantalum is also used to produce a variety of
alloys that have high melting points, are strong and have good
ductility. Alloyed with other metals, it is also used in making
carbide tools for metalworking equipment and in the production of
superalloys for jet engine components, chemical process equipment,
nuclear
reactors, and missile parts. Because of its ductility, tantalum
can be drawn into fine wires or filaments, which are used for
evaporating metals such as aluminium.
Due to the fact that it resists attack by body
fluids and is nonirritating, tantalum is widely used in making
surgical instruments and implants. For example, porous tantalum
coatings are used in the construction of orthopedic implants due to
tantalum's ability to form a direct bond to hard tissue. The oxide
is used to make special high refractive
index glass for
camera lenses. The metal
is also used to make vacuum
furnace parts.
Shaped
charge and
explosively formed penetrator liners have been constructed from
tantalum.
History
Tantalum was discovered in Sweden in 1802 by Anders Ekeberg and isolated in 1820 by Jöns Berzelius. Many contemporary chemists believed niobium and tantalum were the same elements until 1844 and later 1866 when researchers showed that niobic and tantalic acids were different compounds. Early investigators were only able to isolate impure metal and the first relatively pure ductile metal was produced by Werner von Bolton in 1903. Wires made with tantalum metal were used for light bulbs until tungsten replaced it.Its name is derived from the character Tantalus, father
of Niobe in
Greek
mythology, who was punished after death by being condemned to
stand knee-deep in water with perfect fruit growing above his head,
both of which eternally tantalized him - if he bent to drink the
water, it drained below the level he could reach, and if he reached
for the fruit, the branches moved out of his grasp. This was
considered similar to tantalum's general
non-reactivity—it sits among reagents and is unaffected
by them. The English word tantalize
was named after Tantalus, and tantalum was named after the
tantalizing problems posed by the inertness of the element and its
compounds.
For many years, the commercial technology for
separating tantalum from niobium involved the fractional
crystallization of potassium heptafluorotantalate away from
potassium oxypentafluoroniobate monohydrate, that had been
discovered by Marignac in the 1860s. The method has been supplanted
by solvent extraction from fluoride-containing solutions.
Occurrence
There are many species of tantalum minerals, only some of which are so far being used by industry as raw materials: tantalite, microlite, wodginite, euxenite, polycrase. Tantalite [(Fe,Mn) Ta2O6] is the most important mineral for tantalum extraction.Other minerals include samarskite and fergusonite.
The main production of tantalum occurs in
Australia,
where the largest producer, Talison
Minerals (formerly part of the Sons of
Gwalia company), operates the Wodgina mine. Tantalum minerals
are also mined in Brazil, Canada, China, Ethiopia and
Mozambique.
Tantalum is also produced in Thailand and
Malaysia
as a by-product of tin
mining and smelting.
Future large sources of supply, in order of
magnitude, are being explored in Saudi
Arabia, Egypt, Greenland,
China,
Mozambique,
Canada,
Australia,
U.S.A.,
Finland and
Brazil.
A comprehensive, 2002 review of non-Australian
mines is available.
Tantalite has the
same mineral structure as columbite [(Fe,Mn) (Ta,Nb)2O6]; when there is more Ta than
Nb it is called tantalite and when there is more Nb than Ta is it
called columbite (or niobite). In central
Africa the colloquial term coltan is used to refer to the
two minerals equally, an example being the
Democratic Republic of the Congo which the
United States Geological Survey reports in its 2006 yearbook as
having produced a little less than 1% of the world's tantalum for
the past four years.
Ethical questions have been raised about
responsible corporate behaviour, human rights and endangered
wildlife, due to the exploitation of resources such as coltan in
the conflict regions of the Congo. According to United
Nations report smuggling and exportation of coltan helped fuel
the war in the Congo, a crisis that has resulted in approximately
5.4 million deaths since 1998 – making it the world’s deadliest
documented conflict since WW II.
Several complicated steps are involved in the
extraction of tantalum from tantalite, the first being crushing of the mineral and
physical concentration by gravity
separation which is generally carried out near the mine site. Further processing by
chemical
separation is generally accomplished by treating the ores with
a mixture of hydrofluoric
acid and sulfuric
acids at over 90°C. This causes the tantalum and niobium to
dissolve as complex
fluorides and be
separated from the impurities. The resulting
potassium
fluorotantalate salt is
generally treated by reduction with molten sodium to produce a coarse
tantalum powder.
Compounds
Los Alamos National Laboratory scientists have developed a tantalum carbide-graphite composite material that is one of the hardest materials ever synthesized. Korean researchers have developed an amorphous tantalum-tungsten-copper alloy which is more flexible and two to three times stronger than traditional steel alloys.See also tantalum
compounds.
Isotopes
Natural tantalum consists of two isotopes: 180mTa (0.012%) and 181Ta (99.988%). 181Ta is a stable isotope. 180mTa (m denotes a metastable state) is predicted to decay in three ways: isomeric transition to the ground state of 180Ta, beta decay to 180W, electron capture to 180Hf. However, any radioactivity of this nuclear isomer was never observed. Only a lower limit on its half life of over 1015 years has been set. The ground state of 180Ta has a half life of only 8 hours.180mTa is the only naturally occurring nuclear
isomer (excluding radiogenic and cosmogenic short-living
nuclides). It is also the rarest isotope in the Universe, taking
into account the elemental abundance of tantalum and isotopic
abundance of 180mTa in the natural mixture of isotopes.
Tantalum has been proposed as a "salting"
material for nuclear
weapons (cobalt is
another, better-known salting material). A jacket of 181Ta,
irradiated by the intense high-energy neutron flux from an
exploding thermonuclear weapon, would transmute into the
radioactive isotope 182Ta with a half-life of
114.43 days and produce approximately 1.12 MeV of gamma
radiation, significantly increasing the radioactivity of the
weapon's fallout
for several months. Such a weapon is not known to have ever been
built, tested, or used.
Precautions
Compounds containing tantalum are rarely encountered in the laboratory. The metal is highly biocompatible and is used for body implants and coatings, therefore attention may be focused on other elements or the physical nature of the chemical compound.The only concern in the laboratory with tantalum
is with the powder form: as is common with finely divided metal
powders this may catch fire.
A single study from 1956 (Oppenheimer, B.S.,
Oppenheimer, E.T., Danishefsky, I. & Stout, A.P. (1956)
Carcinogenic effects of metals in rodent. Cancer Res., 16, 439-441)
is the only reference in literature ever linking tantalum to local
sarcomas. It is possible
the result was due to other factors not considered in the study.
The study was quoted in
IARC Monograph vol. 74 which includes the following "Note to
the reader": "Inclusion of an agent in the Monographs does not
imply that it is a carcinogen, only that the
published data have been examined."
References
- Los Alamos National Laboratory - Tantalum
- T.I.C. industry site - Tantalum uses, ore mining and extraction
- R. Cohen (2006). Applications of porous tantalum in total hip arthroplasty. Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, 14:646-655.
External links
tantalum in Afrikaans: Tantaal
tantalum in Arabic: تانتالوم
tantalum in Azerbaijani: Tantal
tantalum in Bengali: ট্যানটালাম
tantalum in Belarusian: Тантал
tantalum in Bosnian: Tantal
tantalum in Bulgarian: Тантал (химичен
елемент)
tantalum in Catalan: Tàntal
tantalum in Czech: Tantal
tantalum in Corsican: Tantaliu
tantalum in Danish: Tantal
tantalum in German: Tantal
tantalum in Estonian: Tantaal
tantalum in Modern Greek (1453-): Ταντάλιο
tantalum in Spanish: Tantalio
tantalum in Esperanto: Tantalo
tantalum in Basque: Tantalo
tantalum in Persian: تانتالیوم
tantalum in French: Tantale (chimie)
tantalum in Friulian: Tantali
tantalum in Manx: Tantalum
tantalum in Galician: Tantalio
tantalum in Korean: 탄탈럼
tantalum in Armenian: Տանտալ
tantalum in Croatian: Tantal (element)
tantalum in Ido: Tantalo
tantalum in Indonesian: Tantalum
tantalum in Icelandic: Tantal
tantalum in Italian: Tantalio
tantalum in Hebrew: טנטלום
tantalum in Javanese: Tantalum
tantalum in Swahili (macrolanguage):
Tantali
tantalum in Haitian: Tantal
tantalum in Kurdish: Tantal
tantalum in Latin: Tantalum
tantalum in Latvian: Tantāls
tantalum in Luxembourgish: Tantal
tantalum in Lithuanian: Tantalas
tantalum in Lojban: jinmrtantalu
tantalum in Hungarian: Tantál
tantalum in Malayalam: ടാന്റാലം
tantalum in Dutch: Tantalium
tantalum in Japanese: タンタル
tantalum in Norwegian: Tantal
tantalum in Norwegian Nynorsk: Tantal
tantalum in Occitan (post 1500): Tantal
(quimia)
tantalum in Polish: Tantal (pierwiastek)
tantalum in Portuguese: Tântalo (elemento
químico)
tantalum in Romanian: Tantal (chimie)
tantalum in Russian: Тантал (элемент)
tantalum in Albanian: Tantali
tantalum in Sicilian: Tantaliu
tantalum in Simple English: Tantalum
tantalum in Slovak: Tantal
tantalum in Slovenian: Tantal (element)
tantalum in Serbian: Тантал
tantalum in Serbo-Croatian: Tantalijum
tantalum in Finnish: Tantaali
tantalum in Swedish: Tantal
tantalum in Thai: แทนทาลัม
tantalum in Vietnamese: Tantali
tantalum in Turkish: Tantal
tantalum in Ukrainian: Тантал (хімічний
елемент)
tantalum in Chinese: 钽