cobalt

cobalt
/koh"bawlt/, n.
a silver-white metallic element with a faint pinkish tinge, occurring in compounds whose silicates afford important blue coloring substances for ceramics. Symbol: Co; at. wt.: 58.933; at. no.: 27; sp. gr.: 8.9 at 20°C.
[1675-85; < G Kobalt, var. of Kobold KOBOLD]

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Metallic chemical element, one of the transition elements, chemical symbol Co, atomic number 27.

Widely dispersed in small amounts in many minerals and ores, this magnetic, silvery white metal with a faint bluish tinge is used mostly for special alloys (e.g., alnico, tool steel) with exacting applications. At valence 2 or 3 it forms numerous coordination complexes. One is vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin; see vitamin B complex). Cobalt and its compounds are used in electroplating and colouring ceramics and glass and as lamp filaments, catalysts, a trace element in fertilizers, and paint and varnish driers. The pigment cobalt blue has a variable composition, roughly that of cobalt oxide plus alumina. A radioactive isotope of cobalt emits penetrating gamma rays that are used in radiation therapy.

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Introduction
 chemical element, ferromagnetic metal of Group 9 (VIIIb) of the periodic table, used especially for heat-resistant and magnetic alloys.

      The metal was isolated (c. 1735) by a Swedish chemist, Georg Brandt (Brandt, Georg), though cobalt compounds had been used for centuries to impart a blue colour to glazes and ceramics. Cobalt has been detected in Egyptian statuettes and Persian necklace beads of the 3rd millennium BC, in glass found in the Pompeii ruins, in China as early as the T'ang dynasty (AD 618–907) and later in the blue porcelain of the Ming dynasty. The name kobold was first applied (16th century) to ores thought to contain copper but eventually found to be poisonous, arsenic-bearing cobalt ores. Brandt finally determined (1742) that the blue colour of these ores was due to the presence of cobalt.

Occurrence, properties, and uses
      Cobalt, though widely dispersed, makes up only 0.001 percent of the Earth's crust. It is found in small quantities in terrestrial and meteoritic native nickel-iron, in the Sun and stellar atmospheres, and combined with other elements in natural waters, in nodules beneath the oceans, in soils, in plants and animals, and in such minerals as cobaltite, linnaeite, skutterudite, smaltite, heterogenite, and erythrite. Little cobalt ore is mined for the cobalt content. Traces of cobalt are present in many ores of iron, nickel, copper, silver, manganese, zinc, and arsenic, from which it is often recovered as a by-product. Complex processing is required to concentrate and extract from these ores. (For information on the mining, refining, and recovery of cobalt, see cobalt processing.)

      Cobalt is a trace element essential in the nutrition of ruminants (cattle, sheep) and in the maturation of human red blood cells in the form of vitamin B12, the only vitamin known to contain such a heavy element.

      Polished cobalt is silver-white with a faint bluish tinge. Two allotropes are known: the close-packed-hexagonal structure stable below 417° C (783° F) and the face-centred-cubic, stable at high temperatures. It is ferromagnetic up to 1,121° C (2,050° F, the highest known Curie point of any metal or alloy) and may find application where magnetic properties are needed at elevated temperatures.

      Cobalt is one of the three metals that are ferromagnetic at room temperature. It dissolves slowly in dilute mineral acids, does not combine directly with either hydrogen or nitrogen, but will combine, on heating, with carbon, phosphorus, or sulfur. Cobalt is also attacked by oxygen and by water vapour at elevated temperatures, with the result that cobaltous oxide, CoO (with the metal in the +2 state), is produced.

      Natural cobalt is all stable isotope cobalt-59, from which the longest lived artificial radioactive isotope cobalt-60 (5.3-year half-life) is produced by neutron irradiation in a nuclear reactor. Gamma radiation from cobalt-60 has been used in place of X rays or alpha rays from radium in the inspection of industrial materials to reveal internal structure, flaws, or foreign objects; in cancer therapy; in sterilization studies; and in biology and industry as a radioactive tracer. It is in turn being replaced in both industrial and medical radiology by cesium-137 because of the long (30-year) half-life of the latter.

      Most of the cobalt produced is used for special alloys (alloy). A relatively large percentage of the world's production goes into magnetic alloys such as the Alnicos for permanent magnets. Sizable quantities are utilized for alloys that retain their properties at high temperatures and superalloys that are used near their melting points (where steels would become too soft). Cobalt is also employed for hard-facing alloys, tool steels, low-expansion alloys (for glass-to-metal seals), and constant-modulus (elastic) alloys (for precision hairsprings). Cobalt is the most satisfactory matrix for cemented carbides.

      Finely divided cobalt ignites spontaneously. Larger pieces are relatively inert in air, but above 300° C (570° F) extensive oxidation occurs.

Compounds (chemical compound)
      In its compounds cobalt nearly always exhibits a +2 or +3 oxidation state, although states of +4, +1, 0, and -1 are known. The compounds in which cobalt exhibits the +2 oxidation state (Co2+, the ion being stable in water) are called cobaltous, while those in which cobalt exhibits the +3 oxidation state (Co3+) are termed cobaltic.

      Both Co2+ and Co3+ form numerous coordination compounds, or complexes. Co3+ forms more known complex ions than any other metal except platinum. The coordination number of the complexes is generally six.

      Cobalt forms two well-defined binary compounds with oxygen: cobaltous oxide, CoO, and tricobalt textroxide, or cobalto-cobaltic oxide, Co3O4. The latter contains cobalt in both +2 and +3 oxidation states and comprises up to 40 percent of the commercial cobalt oxide used in the manufacture of ceramics, glass, and enamel and in the preparation of catalysts and cobalt metal powder.

      One of the more important salts of cobalt is the sulfate CoSO4, which is employed in electroplating, in preparing drying agents, and for pasture top-dressing in agriculture. Other cobaltous salts have significant applications in the production of catalysts, driers, cobalt metal powders, and other salts. Cobaltous chloride (CoCl2∙6H2O in commercial form), a pink solid that changes to blue as it dehydrates, is utilized in catalyst preparation and as an indicator of humidity. Cobaltous phosphate, Co3(PO4)2∙8H2O, is used in painting porcelain and colouring glass.

atomic number
27
atomic weight
58.9332
melting point
1,495° C (2,723° F)
boiling point
2,870° C (5,198° F)
density
8.9 g/cm3 (20° C)
oxidation states
+2, +3
electronic config.
[Ar]3d74s2

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Universalium. 2010.

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