Rhenium - Video Learning - WizScience.com
"
Rhenium" is a chemical element with
symbol "Re" and atomic number 75. It is a silvery-white, heavy, third-row transition metal in group 7 of the periodic table. With an "estimated" average concentration of 1 part per billion , rhenium is one of the rarest elements in the
Earth's crust. The free element has the third-highest melting
point and highest boiling point of any element, at 5869 K. Rhenium resembles manganese and technetium chemically and is obtained as a by-product of molybdenum and copper ore's extraction and refinement. Rhenium shows in its compounds a wide variety of oxidation states ranging from −1 to +7.
Discovered in 1925, rhenium was the last stable element to be discovered. It was named after the river Rhine in
Europe.
Nickel-based superalloys of rhenium are used in the combustion chambers, turbine blades, and exhaust nozzles of jet engines. These alloys contain up to 6% rhenium, making jet engine construction the largest single use for the element, with the chemical industry's catalytic uses being next-most important. Because of the low availability relative to demand, rhenium is among the most expensive of metals, with an average price of approximately
US$2,750 per kilogram as of
April 2015; it is also of critical strategic military importance, for its use in high performance military jet and rocket engines.
Rhenium was the last-discovered of the elements that have a stable isotope . The existence of a yet-undiscovered element at this position in the periodic table had been first predicted by
Dmitry Mendeleev. Other calculated information was obtained by
Henry Moseley in
1914. It is generally considered to have been discovered by
Walter Noddack,
Ida Tacke, and
Otto Berg in
Germany. In 1925 they reported that they had detected the element in platinum ore and in the mineral columbite. They also found rhenium in gadolinite and molybdenite. In 1928 they were able to extract 1 g of the element by processing 660 kg of molybdenite. It was estimated in
1968 that 75% of the rhenium metal in the
United States was used for research and the development of refractory metal alloys. It took several years from that point before the superalloys became widely used.
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Disclaimer: This video is for your information only. The author or publisher does not guarantee the accuracy of the content presented in this video. USE AT YOUR OWN RISK.
Background Music:
"The Place Inside" by Silent Partner (royalty-free) from YouTube Audio Library.
This video uses material/images from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhenium, which is released under Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ . This video is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ . To reuse/adapt the content in your own work, you must comply with the license terms.