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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: NEW-NUM |
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NICKEL (symbol Ni, atomic weight 58.68 (0=16)) , a metallic element
recent
oxide
oxide
nickel salts see A. Riche and Laborde, Jour. Pharm. Chem., 1888, [51, 17, PP- 1, 59, 97. Nickel is used for the manufacture of domestic utensils, for crucibles, coinage, plating, and for the preparation of various alloys , such as German silver, nickel steels such as in-ear (nickel, 35'7%; steel, 64.3%), which has a negligible coefficient of thermal expansion, and constantan (nickel, 45%; copper, 55%), which has a negligible thermal coefficient of its electrical resistance.Compounds. Nickel Oxides.Several oxides of nickel are known. A suboxide, Ni20 (?), described by W. Muller (Pogg. Ann., 1869, 212, p. 59), is not certainly known. The monoxide, NiO, occurs naturally as bunsenite, and is obtained artificially when nickel hydroxide, carbonate, nitrate or sulphate is heated. It may also be prepared by the action of nickel on water, by the reduction of the oxide Ni203 with hydrogen at about Zoo C. (H. Moissan, Ann. Chim. Phys., 151, 21, p. 199), Or by heating nickel chloride with sodium carbonate and extracting the fused mass with water. It is a green powder which becomes yellow when heated. It dissociates at a red heat, and is readily reduced to the metal when heated with carbon or in a current of hydrogen. It is readily soluble in acids, forming salts, the rate of solution being rapid if the oxide is in the amorphous condition, but slow if the oxide is crystalline. The hydroxide, Ni(OH)2, is obtained in the form of a greenish amorphous powder when nickel salts are precipitated by the caustic alkalis. It is readily soluble in acids and in an aqueous solution of ammonia. Nickel sesquioxide, NizOi, is formed when the nitrate is decomposed by heat at the lowest possible temperature, by a similar decomposition of the chlorate, or by fusing the chloride with potassium chlorate. It is a black powder, the composition of which is never quite definite, but approximates to the formula
Ann., 187o, 17, p. 122). A peroxide, NiO,, has been obtained in the form of dinickelite of barium, BaO.2NiO2, by heating the monoxide with anhydrous baryta in the electric furnace (E. Dufau, Comptes rendus, 1896, 123, p. 495). G. Pellini and D. Meneghini (Zeit. anorg. Chem., 1908, 6o, p. 178) obtained a greyish green powder of composition NiO2xH2O, by adding an alcoholic solution of potassium hydrate to nickel-chloride and hydrogen peroxide at -5o. It has all the reactions of hydrogen peroxide, and S. Tanatar (Bee., 1909, 42, p. 1516) regards it as NiOH2O2. An oxide, Ni304, has been obtained by heating nickel chloride in a current of moist oxygen at about 400" C. (H. Baubigny, Comptes rendus, 1878, 87, p. 1082), or by heating the sesquioxide in hydrogen at 19o C. (H. Moissan, Ann. Chim. Phys., 1890 [5], 21, p. 199). The former method yields greyish, metallic-looking, microscopic crystals, the latter a grey amorphous powder. A hydrated form, Ni304.2H20, is obtained when the monoxide is fused with sodium peroxide at a red heat and the fused mass extracted with water. Nickel Salts.Only one series of salts is known, namely those corresponding to the monoxide. In the anhydrous state they are usually of a yellow colour, whilst in the hydrated condition they are green. They may be recognized by the brownish violet colour they impart to a borax bead when heated in an oxidizing flame. The caustic alkalis added to solutions of nickel salts give a pale green precipitate of the hydroxide, insoluble in excess of the precipitant. This latter reaction is hindered by the presence of many organic acids (tartaric acid, citric acid, &c.). Potassium cyanide gives a greenish yellow precipitate of nickel cyanide, Ni(CN)2, soluble in excess of potassium cyanide, forming a double
Liebig
of the matte see Christofle and Bouilhet, French Patent 111591 (1876). L. Mond
chief
The following tables show the output of nickel from Canada and the shipments of nickel ore from New Caledonia in recent
CANADA Production Export Production Export (lb). ( ). (lb). (lb). 1900 7,080,227 13,493,239 1905 18,876,315 11,970,557 1901 9,189,047 9,537,558 1906 21,490,955 20,653,845 1902 10,693.410 3,883,264 1907 21,189,793 19,376,335 1903 12,505,510 9,032,554 1908 19,143,111 19,419,893 1904 10,547,883 14,229,973 End of Article: NICKEL (symbol Ni, atomic weight 58.68 (0=16)) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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