Rare Metals
Rare Metals or Rare Earth Elements or Rare Earth Metals are a set of seventeen chemical elements. Rare Earth Elements, due to their geochemical properties, are typically dispersed and not often found in concentrated and economically exploitable forms. The few economically exploitable deposits are known as Rare Earth Minerals.
Name: Scandium
Atomic Number: 21
Symbol: Sc
History: It got its name
from
Latin Scandia (Scandinavia),
where the first rare earth ore was
discovered.
Applications/Uses: Light
aluminium-scandium alloy for
aerospace components, additive in
Mercury-vapor lamps.
Name: Yttrium
Atomic Number: 39
Symbol: Y
History: It has been
named after the village of
Ytterby, Sweden, where the first
rare earth ore was discovered.
Applications/Uses:
Yttrium-aluminium garnet (YAG)
laser, yttrium vanadate (YVO4) as
host for europium in TV red
phosphor, YBCO high-temperature
superconductors, yttrium iron
garnet (YIG) microwave filters.
Name: Lanthanum
Atomic Number: 57
Symbol: La
History: It got its name
from the Greek �lanthanein�,
meaning to be hidden.
Applications/Uses: High
refractive index glass, flint,
hydrogen storage,
battery-electrodes, camera lenses,
fluid catalytic cracking catalyst
for oil refineries
Name: Cerium
Atomic Number: 58
Symbol: Ce
History: It has been
named after the dwarf planet
Ceres, named after the Roman
goddess of agriculture.
Applications/Uses:
Chemical oxidizing agent,
polishing powder, yellow colors in
glass and ceramics, catalyst for
self-cleaning ovens, fluid
catalytic cracking catalyst for
oil refineries, ferrocerium flints
for lighters
Name: Praseodymium
Atomic Number: 59
Symbol: Pr
History: It got its name
from the Greek �prasios�, meaning
leek-green, and �didymos�, meaning
twin. Applications/Uses:
Rare-earth magnets, lasers, core
material for carbon arc lighting,
colorant in glasses and enamels,
additive in didymium glass used in
welding goggles,[4] ferrocerium
firesteel (flint) products.
Name: Neodymium
Atomic Number: 60
Symbol: Nd
History: It got its name
from the Greek �neos�, meaning
new, and �didymos�, meaning twin.
Applications/Uses:
Rare-earth magnets, lasers, violet
colors in glass and ceramics,
ceramic capacitors
Name: Promethium
Atomic Number: 61
Symbol: Pm
History: It has been
named after the Titan Prometheus,
who brought fire to mortals.
Applications/Uses:
Nuclear batteries
Name: Samarium
Atomic Number: 62
Symbol: Sm
History: It has been
named after Vasili
Samarsky-Bykhovets, who discovered
the rare earth ore samarskite.
Applications/Uses:
Rare-earth magnets, lasers,
neutron capture, masers
Name: Europium
Atomic Number: 63
Symbol: Eu
History: It has been
named after the continent of
Europe.
Applications/Uses: Red
and blue phosphors, lasers,
mercury-vapor lamps, NMR
relaxation agent.
Name: Gadolinium
Atomic Number: 64
Symbol: Gd
History: It has been
named after Johan Gadolin
(1760�1852), to honor his
investigation of rare earths.
Applications/Uses:
Rare-earth magnets, high
refractive index glass or garnets,
lasers, X-ray tubes, computer
memories, neutron capture, MRI
contrast agent, NMR relaxation
agent.
Name: Terbium
Atomic Number: 65
Symbol: Tb
History: It has been
named after the village of
Ytterby, Sweden.
Applications/Uses: Green
phosphors, lasers, fluorescent
lamps
Name: Dysprosium
Atomic Number: 66
Symbol: Dy
History: It got its name
from the Greek �dysprositos�,
meaning hard to get.
Applications/Uses:
Rare-earth magnets, lasers
Name: Holmium
Atomic Number: 67
Symbol: Ho
History: It has been
named after Stockholm (in Latin,
�Holmia�), native city of one of
its discoverers.
Applications/Uses: Lasers
Name: Erbium
Atomic Number: 68
Symbol: Er
History: It has been
named after the village of
Ytterby, Sweden.
Applications/Uses:
Lasers, vanadium steel
Name: Thulium
Atomic Number: 69
Symbol: Tm
History: It has been
named after the mythological
northern land of Thule.
Applications/Uses:
Portable X-ray machines
Name: Ytterbium
Atomic Number: 70
Symbol: Yb
History: It has been
named after the village of
Ytterby, Sweden.
Applications/Uses:
Infrared lasers, chemical reducing
agent
Name: Lutetium
Atomic Number: 71
Symbol: Lu
History: It has been
named after Lutetia, the city
which later became Paris.
Applications/Uses: PET
Scan detectors, high refractive
index glass.
Name: Rhenium
Atomic Number: 75 Symbol: Re
Rarity: 0.7 ppb
History: Discovered in 1925,
rhenium was the last stable
element to be discovered. It was
named after the river Rhine in
Europe. Applications/Uses: Rhenium
is added to high-temperature super
alloys that are used to make jet
engine parts, using 70% of the
worldwide rhenium production.
Another major application is in
platinum-rhenium catalysts, which
are primarily used in making
lead-free, high-octane gasoline.
Name: Iridium
Atomic Number: 77 Symbol: Ir
Rarity: 1 ppb History: Iridium was
discovered in 1803 among insoluble
impurities in natural platinum.
Smithson Tennant, the primary
discoverer, named the iridium for
the goddess Iris.
Applications/Uses: electronics-related;
iridium crucibles are commonly
used for growing large
high-quality single crystals;
spark plugs; electrodes for the
chloralkali process; and chemical
catalysts.
Name: Rhodium
Atomic Number: 45 Symbol: Rh
Rarity: 1 ppb History: Rhodium was
discovered in 1803 by William Hyde
Wollaston in an ore of platinum or
nickel, and was named for the rose
color of one of its chlorine
compounds, produced after it
reacted with the powerful acid
mixture aqua regia.
Applications/Uses: catalytic
converter; glass industry, mostly
for production of fiberglass and
flat-panel glass; Rhodium
detectors are used in nuclear
reactors to measure the neutron
flux level.
Name: Ruthenium
Atomic Number: 44 Symbol: Ru
Rarity: 1 ppb History: Russian
scientist, Karl Ernst Claus,
discovered the element in 1844 and
named it after Ruthenia, the Latin
word for Rus� (ancient Russia).
Applications/Uses: used for
wear-resistant electrical contacts
and the production of thick-film
resistors; platinum alloys.
Name: Tellurium
Atomic Number: 52 Symbol: Te
Rarity: 1 ppb History: Tellurium
was discovered in Transylvania
(today part of Romania) in 1782 by
Franz-Joseph M�ller von
Reichenstein in a mineral
containing tellurium and gold.
Martin Heinrich Klaproth named the
new element in 1798 after the
Latin word for �earth�, tellus
Applications/Uses: it is used in
iron, copper and lead alloys; it
makes stainless steel and copper
more machinable; it improves
strength and durability of lead;
it decreases the corrosive action
of sulfuric acid.
Name: Osmium
Atomic Number: 76 Symbol: Os
Rarity: 1.5 ppb History: Osmium
(from Greek �osme� meaning
�smell�) was discovered in 1803 by
Smithson Tennant and William Hyde
Wollaston in London, England.
Applications/Uses: Its alloys with
platinum, iridium, and other
platinum group metals are employed
in fountain pen tips, electrical
contacts, and other applications
where extreme durability and
hardness are needed.
Name: Gold
Atomic Number: 79 Symbol: Au
Rarity: 4 ppb History: Gold has
been a valuable and highly
sought-after precious metal for
coinage, jewelry, and other arts
since long before the beginning of
recorded history.
Applications/Uses: Monetary
exchange; Investment; Jewelry;
Medicine; Food and drink;
Industry; Electronics; Commercial
chemistry.
Name: Platinum
Atomic Number: 78 Symbol: Pt
Rarity: 5 ppb History: Its name is
derived from the Spanish term
platina, which is literally
translated into �little silver�.
The first European reference to
platinum appears in 1557 in the
writings of the Italian humanist
Julius Caesar Scaliger as a
description of an unknown noble
metal found between Dari�n and
Mexico, �which no fire nor any
Spanish artifice has yet been able
to liquefy.�
Applications/Uses: Platinum is
used in catalytic converters,
laboratory equipment, electrical
contacts and electrodes, platinum
resistance thermometers, dentistry
equipment, and jewelry.
Name: Bismuth
Atomic Number: 83 Symbol: Bi
Rarity: 8.5 ppb History: Bismuth
metal has been known from ancient
times, but its name possibly comes
from Arabic �bi ismid�, meaning
having the properties of antimony
or German words �weisse masse or
wismuth� (white mass), translated
in the mid sixteenth century to
New Latin �bisemutum�.
Applications/Uses: pharmaceuticals,
pigments, cosmetics, metallurgical
additives for casting and
galvanizing, bismuth alloys,
solders and ammunition.
Name: Palladium
Atomic Number: 46 Symbol: Pd
Rarity: 15 ppb History: It is a
rare and lustrous silvery-white
metal discovered in 1803 by
William Hyde Wollaston. He named
it after the asteroid Pallas,
which was itself named after the
epithet of the Greek goddess
Athena, acquired by her when she
slew Pallas.
Applications/Uses: catalytic
converters, electronics,
dentistry, medicine, hydrogen
purification, chemical
applications, and groundwater
treatment
Name: Silver
Atomic Number: 47 Symbol: Ag
Rarity: 75 ppb History: Silver has
been known since ancient times.
The chemical symbol �Ag� is from
the Latin for silver, argentum,
from the Indo-European root *arg-
meaning �white� or �shining�.
Applications/Uses: investment, to
make ornaments, jewelry,
high-value tableware, utensils,
currency coins, electrical
contacts and conductors, in
mirrors and in catalysis of
chemical reactions.
Name: Mercury
Atomic Number: 80 Symbol: Hg
Rarity: 85 ppb History: Mercury
was found in Egyptian tombs that
date from 1500 BC.
Applications/Uses: Mercury is used
primarily for the manufacture of
industrial chemicals or for
electrical and electronic
applications. It is used in some
thermometers, especially ones
which are used to measure high
temperatures. A still increasing
amount is used as gaseous mercury
in fluorescent lamps.
Name: Indium
Atomic Number: 49 Symbol: In
Rarity: 250 ppb History: German
chemists Ferdinand Reich and
Hieronymous Theodor Richter
discovered it in 1863 while doing
spectroscopy and named the element
with the blue spectral line
indium, from the indigo color seen
in its spectrum.
Applications/Uses: coating for
bearings in high-performance
aircraft engines, fusible alloys,
solders, and electronics,
semiconductors, liquid crystal
displays (LCD).
Name: Germanium
Atomic Number: 32 Symbol: Ge
Rarity: 1500 ppb History: In 1886,
Clemens Winkler found the new
element along with silver and
sulfur, in a rare mineral called
argyrodite and named the element
after his country, Germany.
Applications/Uses: Germanium
�metal� (isolated germanium) is
used as semiconductor in
transistors and various other
electronic devices. PET bottles.
Name – Californium

Atomic Number : 98
The element was first synthesized in 1950 at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (then the University of California Radiation Laboratory), by bombarding curium with alpha particles (helium-4 ions).