Skip to main content

Praseodymium Information

Praseodymium Information
Scroll Down To Download


Praseodymium Element

Praseodymium is a chemical element with the symbol Pr and atomic number 59. It is the third member of the lanthanide series and is traditionally considered to be one of the rare-earth metals. Praseodymium is a soft, silvery, malleable and ductile metal, valued for its magnetic, electrical, chemical, and optical properties. It is too reactive to be found in native form, and pure praseodymium metal slowly develops a green oxide coating when exposed to air.

Praseodymium always occurs naturally together with the other rare-earth metals. It is the fourth most common rare-earth element, making up 9.1 parts per million of the Earth's crust, an abundance similar to that of boron. In 1841, Swedish chemist Carl Gustav Mosander extracted a rare-earth oxide residue he called didymium from a residue he called "lanthana", in turn separated from cerium salts. In 1885, the Austrian chemist Baron Carl Auer von Welsbach separated didymium into two elements that gave salts of different colours, which he named praseodymium and neodymium. The name praseodymium comes from the Greek prasinos (πράσινος), meaning "green", and didymos (δίδυμος), "twin".
Praseodymium is a moderately soft, ductile, and malleable silvery white metal. It rapidly displaces hydrogen from water in diluted acids (except hydrofluoric acid [HF]) and slowly oxidizes in air, developing a green-yellowish oxide coating with complex and varying stoichiometry that can be expressed using a generic formula PrOx (1.5 ≤ x ≤ 2). The metal is best stored sealed in a plastic covering either in vacuum or in an inert atmosphere. Praseodymium is strongly paramagnetic, and an unstrained single-crystal sample will order antiferromagnetically at 0.03 K (−273.12 °C, or −459.62 °F). However, if praseodymium is strained, it may order at temperatures as high as about 20 K (−253 °C, or −424 °F).

Praseodymium was discovered in didymia, a mixture of several rare-earth oxides. From it, by repeated fractional crystallization of ammonium didymium nitrate, Austrian chemist Carl Auer von Welsbach in 1885 separated salts of the elements praseodymium (the green fraction) and neodymium (the pink fraction). Praseodymium occurs in minerals such as monazite and bastnasite and as one of the products of nuclear fission.
Like most rare-earth elements, praseodymium most readily forms the +3 oxidation state, which is the only stable state in aqueous solution, although the +4 oxidation state is known in some solid compounds and, uniquely among the lanthanides, the +5 oxidation state is attainable in matrix-isolation conditions. Aqueous praseodymium ions are yellowish-green, and similarly praseodymium results in various shades of yellow-green when incorporated into glasses. Many of praseodymium's industrial uses involve its ability to filter yellow light from light sources.

Movies ColdStar is The Best Website/Platform For Hollywood HD Movies. We Provide Direct Download Links For Fast And Secure Downloading. Just Click On Download Button.

Join Telegram For Movies Request :- Join


You have to wait 25 seconds.

Direct Download




Watch Online

Comments