Terbium

Not to be confused with Ytterbium or Erbium.
Terbium,  65Tb
General properties
Name, symbol terbium, Tb
Pronunciation /ˈtɜːrbiəm/
TUR-bee-əm
Appearance silvery white
Terbium in the periodic table


Tb

Bk
gadoliniumterbiumdysprosium
Atomic number (Z) 65
Group, block group n/a, f-block
Period period 6
Element category   lanthanide
Standard atomic weight (±) (Ar) 158.92535(2)[1]
Electron configuration [Xe] 4f9 6s2
per shell
2, 8, 18, 27, 8, 2
Physical properties
Phase solid
Melting point 1629 K (1356 °C, 2473 °F)
Boiling point 3396 K (3123 °C, 5653 °F)
Density near r.t. 8.23 g/cm3
when liquid, at m.p. 7.65 g/cm3
Heat of fusion 10.15 kJ/mol
Heat of vaporization 391 kJ/mol
Molar heat capacity 28.91 J/(mol·K)

Vapor pressure

P (Pa) 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 k
at T (K) 1789 1979 (2201) (2505) (2913) (3491)
Atomic properties
Oxidation states 4, 3, 2, 1 (a weakly basic oxide)
Electronegativity Pauling scale: 1.2 (?)
Ionization energies 1st: 565.8 kJ/mol
2nd: 1110 kJ/mol
3rd: 2114 kJ/mol
Atomic radius empirical: 177 pm
Covalent radius 194±5 pm
Miscellanea
Crystal structure

hexagonal close-packed (hcp)

Hexagonal close packed crystal structure for terbium
Speed of sound thin rod 2620 m/s (at 20 °C)
Thermal expansion at r.t. α, poly: 10.3 µm/(m·K)
Thermal conductivity 11.1 W/(m·K)
Electrical resistivity α, poly: 1.150 µΩ·m (at r.t.)
Magnetic ordering paramagnetic at 300 K
Young's modulus α form: 55.7 GPa
Shear modulus α form: 22.1 GPa
Bulk modulus α form: 38.7 GPa
Poisson ratio α form: 0.261
Vickers hardness 450–865 MPa
Brinell hardness 675–1200 MPa
CAS Number 7440-27-9
History
Naming after Ytterby (Sweden), where it was mined
Discovery and first isolation Carl Gustaf Mosander (1843)
Most stable isotopes of terbium
iso NA half-life DM DE (MeV) DP
157Tb syn 71 y ε 0.060 157Gd
158Tb syn 180 y ε 1.220 158Gd
β 0.937 158Dy
159Tb 100% is stable with 94 neutrons

Terbium is a chemical element with symbol Tb and atomic number 65. It is a silvery-white rare earth metal that is malleable, ductile and soft enough to be cut with a knife. The ninth member of the lanthanide series, terbium is a fairly electropositive metal that reacts with water, evolving hydrogen gas. Terbium is never found in nature as a free element, but it is contained in many minerals, including cerite, gadolinite, monazite, xenotime and euxenite.

Swedish chemist Carl Gustaf Mosander discovered terbium as a separate elemental compound in 1843. He detected it as an impurity in yttrium oxide, Y2O3. Yttrium and terbium are named after the village of Ytterby in Sweden. Terbium was not isolated in pure form until the advent of ion exchange techniques.

Terbium is used to dope calcium fluoride, calcium tungstate and strontium molybdate, materials that are used in solid-state devices, and as a crystal stabilizer of fuel cells which operate at elevated temperatures. As a component of Terfenol-D (an alloy that expands and contracts when exposed to magnetic fields more than any other alloy), terbium is of use in actuators, in naval sonar systems and in sensors.

Most of the world's terbium supply is used in green phosphors. Terbium oxide is in fluorescent lamps and TV tubes. Terbium green phosphors are combined with divalent europium blue phosphors and trivalent europium red phosphors to provide "trichromatic" lighting technology, a high-efficiency white light used for standard illumination in indoor lighting.

Characteristics

Physical properties

Terbium is a silvery-white rare earth metal that is malleable, ductile and soft enough to be cut with a knife.[2] It is relatively stable in air compared to the earlier, more reactive lanthanides in the first half of the lanthanide series.[3] Terbium exists in two crystal allotropes with a transformation temperature of 1289 °C between them.[2] The 65 electrons of a terbium atom are arranged in the electron configuration [Xe]4f96s2; normally, only three electrons can be removed before the nuclear charge becomes too great to allow further ionization, but in the case of terbium, the stability of the half-filled [Xe]4f7 configuration allows further ionization of a fourth electron in the presence of very strong oxidizing agents such as fluorine gas.[2]

The terbium(III) cation is brilliantly fluorescent, in a bright lemon-yellow color that is the result of a strong green emission line in combination with other lines in the orange and red. The yttrofluorite variety of the mineral fluorite owes its creamy-yellow fluorescence in part to terbium. Terbium easily oxidizes, and is therefore used in its elemental form specifically for research. Single terbium atoms have been isolated by implanting them into fullerene molecules.[4]

Terbium has a simple ferromagnetic ordering at temperatures below 219 K. Above 219 K, it turns into a helical antiferromagnetic state in which all of the atomic moments in a particular basal plane layer are parallel, and oriented at a fixed angle to the moments of adjacent layers. This unusual antiferromagnetism transforms into a disordered paramagnetic state at 230 K.[5]

Chemical properties

The most common oxidation state of terbium is +3, as in Tb
2
O
3
. The +4 state is known in TbO2 and TbF4.[6][7] Terbium burns readily to form a mixed terbium(III,IV) oxide:[8]

8 Tb + 7 O2 → 2 Tb4O7

In solution, terbium forms only trivalent ions. Terbium is quite electropositive and reacts slowly with cold water and quite quickly with hot water to form terbium hydroxide:[8]

2 Tb + 6 H2O → 2 Tb(OH)3 + 3 H2

Terbium metal reacts with all the halogens, forming white trihalides:[8]

2 Tb + 3 X2 → 2 TbX3 (X = F, Cl, Br, I)

Terbium dissolves readily in dilute sulfuric acid to form solutions containing the pale pink terbium(III) ions, which exist as a [Tb(OH2)9]3+ complexes:[8]

2 Tb (s) + 3 H2SO4 → 2 Tb3+ + 3 SO2−
4
+ 3 H2

Compounds

Terbium sulfate, Tb2(SO4)3 (top), fluoresces green under ultraviolet light (bottom)

Terbium combines with nitrogen, carbon, sulfur, phosphorus, boron, selenium, silicon and arsenic at elevated temperatures, forming various binary compounds such as TbH2, TbH3, TbB2, Tb2S3, TbSe, TbTe and TbN.[7] In those compounds, Tb mostly exhibits the oxidation states +3 and sometimes +2. Terbium(II) halogenides are obtained by annealing Tb(III) halogenides in presence of metallic Tb in tantalum containers. Terbium also forms sesquichloride Tb2Cl3, which can be further reduced to TbCl by annealing at 800 °C. This terbium(I) chloride forms platelets with layered graphite-like structure.[9]

Other compounds include

Terbium(IV) fluoride is a strong fluorinating agent, emitting relatively pure atomic fluorine when heated[10] rather than the mixture of fluoride vapors emitted from CoF3 or CeF4.

Isotopes

Main article: isotopes of terbium

Naturally occurring terbium is composed of its only stable isotope, terbium-159; the element is thus called mononuclidic and monoisotopic. Thirty six radioisotopes have been characterized, with the heaviest being terbium-171 (with atomic mass of 170.95330(86) u) and lightest being terbium-135 (exact mass unknown).[11] The most stable synthetic radioisotopes of terbium are terbium-158, with a half-life of 180 years, and terbium-157, with a half-life of 71 years. All of the remaining radioactive isotopes have half-lives that are much less than a quarter of a year, and the majority of these have half-lives that are less than half a minute.[11] The primary decay mode before the most abundant stable isotope, 159Tb, is electron capture, which results in production of gadolinium isotopes, and the primary mode after is beta minus decay, resulting in dysprosium isotopes.[11]

The element also has 27 nuclear isomers, with masses of 141–154, 156, and 158 (not every mass number corresponds to only one isomer). The most stable of them are terbium-156m, with half-life of 24.4 hours and terbium-156m2, with half-life of 22.7 hours; this is longer than half-lives of most ground states of radioactive terbium isotopes, except only those with mass numbers 155–161.[11]

History

Swedish chemist Carl Gustaf Mosander discovered terbium in 1843. He detected it as an impurity in yttrium oxide, Y2O3. Yttrium is named after the village of Ytterby in Sweden. Terbium was not isolated in pure form until the advent of ion exchange techniques.[12]

Mosander first separated yttria into three fractions, all named for the ore: yttria, erbia, and terbia. "Terbia" was originally the fraction that contained the pink color, due to the element now known as erbium. "Erbia" (containing what we now call terbium) originally was the fraction that was essentially colorless in solution. The insoluble oxide of this element was noted to be tinged brown.

Later workers had difficulty in observing the minor colorless "erbia," but the soluble pink fraction was impossible to miss. Arguments went back and forth as to whether erbia even existed. In the confusion, the original names got reversed, and the exchange of names stuck, so that the pink fraction referred eventually to the solution containing erbium (which in solution, is pink). It is now thought that workers using double sodium or potassium sulfates to remove ceria from yttria inadvertently lost the terbium into the ceria-containing precipitate. What is now known as terbium was only about 1% of the original yttria, but that was sufficient to impart a yellowish color to the yttrium oxide. Thus, terbium was a minor component in the original fraction containing it, where it was dominated by its immediate neighbors, gadolinium and dysprosium.

Thereafter, whenever other rare earths were teased apart from this mixture, whichever fraction gave the brown oxide retained the terbium name, until at last, the brown oxide of terbium was obtained in pure form. The 19th century investigators did not have the benefit of the UV fluorescence technology to observe the brilliant yellow or green Tb(III) fluorescence that would have made terbium easier to identify in solid mixtures or solutions.[12]

Occurrence

Xenotime

Terbium is contained along with other rare earth elements in many minerals, including monazite ((Ce,La,Th,Nd,Y)PO4 with up to 0.03% terbium), xenotime (YPO4) and euxenite ((Y,Ca,Er,La,Ce,U,Th)(Nb,Ta,Ti)2O6 with 1% or more terbium). The crust abundance of terbium is estimated as 1.2 mg/kg.[7]

Currently, the richest commercial sources of terbium are the ion-adsorption clays of southern China; the concentrates with about two-thirds yttrium oxide by weight have about 1% terbia. Small amounts of terbium occur in bastnäsite and monazite; when these are processed by solvent extraction to recover the valuable heavy lanthanides as samarium-europium-gadolinium concentrate, terbium is recovered therein. Due to the large volumes of bastnäsite processed relative to the ion-adsorption clays, a significant proportion of the world's terbium supply comes from bastnäsite.[2]

Production

Crushed terbium-containing minerals are treated with hot concentrated sulfuric acid to produce water-soluble sulfates of rare earths. The acidic filtrates are partially neutralized with caustic soda to pH 3–4. Thorium precipitates out of solution as hydroxide and is removed. After that the solution is treated with ammonium oxalate to convert rare earths into their insoluble oxalates. The oxalates are decomposed to oxides by heating. The oxides are dissolved in nitric acid that excludes one of the main components, cerium, whose oxide is insoluble in HNO3. Terbium is separated as a double salt with ammonium nitrate by crystallization.[7]

The most efficient separation routine for terbium salt from the rare-earth salt solution is ion exchange. In this process, rare-earth ions are sorbed onto suitable ion-exchange resin by exchange with hydrogen, ammonium or cupric ions present in the resin. The rare earth ions are then selectively washed out by suitable complexing agent. As with other rare earths, terbium metal is produced by reducing the anhydrous chloride or fluoride with calcium metal. Calcium and tantalum impurities can be removed by vacuum remelting, distillation, amalgam formation or zone melting.[7]

Applications

Terbium is used as a dopant in calcium fluoride, calcium tungstate, and strontium molybdate, materials that are used in solid-state devices, and as a crystal stabilizer of fuel cells which operate at elevated temperatures, together with ZrO2.[2]

Terbium is also used in alloys and in the production of electronic devices. As a component of Terfenol-D, terbium is used in actuators, in naval sonar systems, sensors, in the SoundBug device (its first commercial application), and other magnetomechanical devices. Terfenol-D is a terbium alloy that expands or contracts in the presence of a magnetic field. It has the highest magnetostriction of any alloy.[13]

Terbium oxide is used in green phosphors in fluorescent lamps and color TV tubes. Sodium terbium borate is used in solid state devices. The brilliant fluorescence allows terbium to be used as a probe in biochemistry, where it somewhat resembles calcium in its behavior. Terbium "green" phosphors (which fluoresce a brilliant lemon-yellow) are combined with divalent europium blue phosphors and trivalent europium red phosphors to provide the "trichromatic" lighting technology which is by far the largest consumer of the world's terbium supply. Trichromatic lighting provides much higher light output for a given amount of electrical energy than does incandescent lighting.[2]

Terbium is also used to detect endospores, as it acts as an assay of dipicolinic acid based on photoluminescence.[14]

Precautions

As with the other lanthanides, terbium compounds are of low to moderate toxicity, although their toxicity has not been investigated in detail. Terbium has no known biological role.[2]

References

  1. Standard Atomic Weights 2013. Commission on Isotopic Abundances and Atomic Weights
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Hammond, C. R. (2005). "The Elements". In Lide, D. R. CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (86th ed.). Boca Raton (FL): CRC Press. ISBN 0-8493-0486-5.
  3. "Rare-Earth Metal Long Term Air Exposure Test". Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  4. Shimada, T.; Ohno, Y.; Okazaki, T.; et al. (2004). "Transport properties of C78, C90 and Dy@C82 fullerenes - nanopeapods by field effect transistors". Physica E: Low-dimensional Systems and Nanostructures. 21 (2–4): 1089–1092. Bibcode:2004PhyE...21.1089S. doi:10.1016/j.physe.2003.11.197.
  5. Jackson, M. (2000). "Magnetism of Rare Earth" (PDF). The IRM quarterly. 10 (3): 1.
  6. Gruen, D.M.; Koehler, W.C.; Katz, J.J. (April 1951). "Higher Oxides of the Lanthanide Elements: Terbium Dioxide". Journal of the American Chemical Society (PDF). 73 (4): 1475–9. doi:10.1021/ja01148a020.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Patnaik, Pradyot (2003). Handbook of Inorganic Chemical Compounds. McGraw-Hill. pp. 920–921. ISBN 0-07-049439-8. Retrieved 2009-06-06.
  8. 1 2 3 4 "Chemical reactions of Terbium". Webelements. Retrieved 2009-06-06.
  9. Cotton (2007). Advanced inorganic chemistry (6th ed.). Wiley-India. p. 1128. ISBN 81-265-1338-1.
  10. Rau, J.V.; Chilingarov, N.S.; Leskiv, M.S.; Sukhoverkhov', V.F.; Rossi Albertini, V.; Sidorov, L.N. (2001). "Transition and rare earth metal fluorides as thermal sources of atomic and molecular fluorine".
  11. 1 2 3 4 G. Audi; A. H. Wapstra; C. Thibault; J. Blachot & O. Bersillon (2003). "The NUBASE evaluation of nuclear and decay properties" (PDF). Nuclear Physics A. 729: 3–128. Bibcode:2003NuPhA.729....3A. doi:10.1016/j.nuclphysa.2003.11.001.
  12. 1 2 Gupta, C. K.; Krishnamurthy, Nagaiyar (2004). Extractive metallurgy of rare earths. CRC Press. p. 5. ISBN 0-415-33340-7.
  13. Rodriguez, C; Rodriguez, M; Orue, I; Vilas, J; Barandiaran, J; Gubieda, M; Leon, L (2009). "New elastomer–Terfenol-D magnetostrictive composites". Sensors and Actuators A: Physical. 149 (2): 251. doi:10.1016/j.sna.2008.11.026.
  14. Rosen, D.L.; Sharpless, C.; McGown, L.B. (1997). "Bacterial Spore Detection and Determination by Use of Terbium Dipicolinate Photoluminescence". Analytical Chemistry. 69 (6): 1082–1085. doi:10.1021/ac960939w.
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