Everything about Rhodium totally explained
» Rh redirects here. For other uses, see rh (disambiguation)
Rhodium is a
chemical element with the symbol
Rh and
atomic number 45. A rare silvery-white hard
transition metal and a member of the
platinum group, rhodium is found in platinum ores and is used in
alloys with platinum and as a
catalyst. It is usually the most expensive
precious metal, though it's sometimes surpassed by
rhenium, depending on the market.
Notable characteristics
Rhodium is a hard silvery white and durable metal that has a high
reflectance. Rhodium metal doesn't normally form an
oxide, even when heated.
Oxygen is absorbed from the
atmosphere at the
melting point of rhodium, but on solidification the oxygen is released. Rhodium has both a higher melting point and lower
density than
platinum. It isn't attacked by
acids: it's completely insoluble in
nitric acid and dissolves slightly in
aqua regia. A complete dissolution of rhodium in powder form is only obtained in
sulfuric acid.
Applications
The primary use of this element is as an alloying agent for hardening
platinum and
palladium. These alloys are used in furnace windings, bushings for glass fiber production,
thermocouple elements,
electrodes for aircraft
spark plugs, and laboratory crucibles. Other uses include:
- It is used as an electrical contact material due to its low electrical resistance, low and stable contact resistance, and its high corrosion resistance.
- Plated rhodium, made by electroplating or evaporation, is extremely hard and is used for optical instruments.
- This metal finds use in jewelry and for decorations. It is electroplated on white gold and platinum to give it a reflective white surface. This is known as rhodium flashing in the jewelry business. It also may be used in coating sterling silver in order to strengthen the metal from tarnish, as a result from the copper compound found in sterling silver.
- It is also a highly useful catalyst in a number of industrial processes (notably it's used in the catalytic system of automobile catalytic converters and for catalytic carbonylation of methanol to produce acetic acid by the Monsanto process). It is used to catalyse addition of hydrosilanes to a double bond, a process important in manufacture of certain silicone rubbers.
- The complex of a rhodium ion with BINAP gives a widely used chiral catalyst for chiral synthesis, as in the synthesis of menthol.
- It is also used as a filter in mammography systems because of the characteristic x-rays it produces.
- It is also used in high quality pen surfaces due to its high-resistance characteristics. These pens include Graf von Faber-Castell which is rather less famous than Montblanc, but produces very limited pens.
History
Rhodium (
Greek rhodon meaning "rose") was
discovered in
1803 by
William Hyde Wollaston, soon after his discovery of
palladium. He made this discovery in
England using crude
platinum ore that he presumably obtained from
South America.
His procedure involved dissolving the ore in
aqua regia, neutralizing the acid with
sodium hydroxide (
NaOH). He then precipitated the platinum by adding
ammonium chloride,
NH
4Cl, as
ammonium chloroplatinate. The element palladium was removed as
palladium cyanide after treating the solution with
mercuric cyanide. The material that remained was a red
rhodium(III) chloride (hence the name): rhodium metal was isolated via reduction with
hydrogen gas.
Occurrence
Normal mining
The industrial extraction of rhodium is complex as the metal occurs in ores mixed with other metals such as
palladium,
silver,
platinum, and
gold. It is found in platinum ores and obtained free as a white inert metal which is very difficult to fuse. Principal sources of this element are located in South Africa, in river sands of the
Ural Mountains, in North and South America and also in the
copper-
nickel sulfide mining area of the
Sudbury, Ontario region. Although the quantity at Sudbury is very small, the large amount of nickel ore processed makes rhodium recovery cost effective. The main exporter of rhodium is South Africa (>80%) followed by Russia. The annual world production of this element is only about 25
tons and there are very few rhodium
minerals. As of October 2007, rhodium cost approximately eight times more than gold, 450 times more than silver, and 27,250 times more than copper by weight. Rhodium's typical historical price is about $1,000/troy oz, but in recent years it has increased to about $9500/troy oz.
As a fission product
It is also possible to extract rhodium from
used nuclear fuel, which contains rhodium (1 kg of the
fission products of
235U contain 13.3 grams of
103Rh). So as a typical used fuel is 3% fission products by weight it'll contain about 400 grams of rhodium per ton of used fuel. The longest lived radioisotope of rhodium is
102mRh which has a half life of 2.9 years, while the ground state (
102Rh)has a half life of 207 days.
Each kilo of fission rhodium will contain 6.62 ng of
102Rh and 3.68 ng of
102mRh. As
102Rh decays by
beta decay to either
102Ru (80%) (some
positron emission will occur) or
102Pd (20%) (some
gamma ray photons with about 500 keV are generated) and the excited state decays by beta decay (electron capture) to
102Ru (some
gamma ray photons with about 1 MeV are generated). If the fission occurs in an instant then 13.3 grams of rhodium will contain 67.1 MBq (1.81 mCi) of
102Rh and 10.8 MBq (291 μCi) of
102mRh. As it's normal to allow used nuclear fuel to stand for about five years before reprocessing, much of this activity will decay away leaving 4.7 MBq of
102Rh and 5.0 MBq of
102mRh. If the rhodium metal was then left for 20 years after fission, then the 13.3 grams of rhodium metal would contain 1.3 kBq of
102Rh and 500 kBq of
102mRh. At first glance the rhodium might be adding to the resource value of reprocessed fission waste, but the cost of the separation of the rhodium from the other metals needs to be considered.
Isotopes
Naturally occurring rhodium is composed of only one
isotope,
103Rh. The most stable
radioisotopes are
101Rh with a
half-life of 3.3 years,
102Rh with a
half-life of 207 days,
102mRh with a
half-life of 2.9 years, and
99Rh with a half-life of 16.1 days. Twenty other radioisotopes have been characterized with
atomic weights ranging from 92.926
u (
93Rh) to 116.925 u (
117Rh). Most of these have half-lifes that are less than an hour except
100Rh (half-life: 20.8 hours) and
105Rh (half-life: 35.36 hours). There are also numerous
meta states with the most stable being
102mRh (0.141 MeV) with a half-life of about 207 days and
101mRh (0.157 MeV) with a half-life of 4.34 days. See
isotopes of rhodium.
The primary
decay mode before the only stable isotope,
103Rh, is
electron capture and the primary mode after is
beta emission. The primary
decay product before
103Rh is
ruthenium and the primary product after is
palladium.
Precautions
Rhodium metal is, as a noble metal, inert. However, when rhodium is chemically bound, it's reactive. Rhodium compounds are not often encountered by most people and should be considered to be
toxic and possibly
carcinogenic. Lethal intake (LD50) for rats is 12.6 mg/kg of rhodium chloride (RhCl
3). Rhodium compounds can strongly stain human skin. The element plays no biological role in humans. If used in elemental form rather than as compounds, the metal is harmless.
Symbolic uses
Rhodium has been used for honours, or to symbolize wealth, when more commonly used metals such as silver, gold, or platinum are deemed insufficient. In 1979 the
Guinness Book of World Records gave
Paul McCartney a rhodium-plated disc for being history's all-time best-selling songwriter and recording artist. Guinness has also noted items such as the world's "Most Expensive Pen" or "Most Expensive Board Game" as containing rhodium.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Rhodium'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://rhodium.totallyexplained.com">Rhodium Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |