Dictionary Definition
lanthanum n : a white soft metallic element that
tarnishes readily; occurs in rare earth minerals and is usually
classified as a rare earth [syn: La, atomic
number 57]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Alternative spellings
- lantanium (obsolete)
- lanthanium (obsolete)
Noun
- A metallic chemical element (symbol La) with an atomic number of 57.
Related terms
rel-top terms related to lanthanumDerived terms
rel-top terms derived from lanthanum- lanthanum carbonate
- lanthanum chloride
- lanthanum glass
- lanthanum nitrate
- lanthanum oxide
- lanthanum oxybromide
- lanthanum sesquioxide
Translations
metallic element
- Afrikaans: lantaan
- Albanian: lantan
- Arabic: (lanθá:num)
- Armenian: լանթան (lant‘an)
- Basque: lantanoa
- Belarusian: лантан (lantán)
- Bosnian: lantan
- Breton: lantan
- Bulgarian: лантан (lantán)
- Catalan: lantani
- Chinese: 鑭 (làn)
- Cornish: lanthanum
- Croatian: lantan
- Czech: lanthan
- Danish: lanthan
- Dutch: lanthaan
- Esperanto: lantano
- Estonian: lantaan
- Faroese: lanthan
- Finnish: lantaani
- French: lanthane
- Friulian: lantani
- Galician: lantano
- Georgian: ლანთანი (lantani)
- German: Lanthan
- Greek, Modern: λανθάνιο (lanthánio)
- Hebrew: לנתן (lantán)
- Hungarian: lantán
- Icelandic: lanþan
- Ido: lantano
- Irish: lantainam
- Italian: lantanio
- Japanese: ランタン (rantan)
- Kashmiri: lantón
- Kazakh: лантан (lantan)
- Korean: 란탄 (rantan), 란타늄 (rantanyum)
- Latin: lanthanum
- Latvian: lantāns
- Lithuanian: lantanas
- Luxembourgish: lanthan
- Macedonian: лантан (lantán)
- Malay: lanthanum
- Maltese: lantanum
- Manx: lantanum
- Mongolian: лантан (lantan)
- Norwegian: lantan
- Polish: lantan
- Portuguese: lantânio
- Romanian: lantan
- Russian: лантан (lantán)
- Scottish Gaelic: lantanam
- Serbian: лантан (lantan)
- Slovak: lanthán
- Slovenian: lantan
- Spanish: lantano
- Swedish: lantan
- Tajik: lantan
- Tamil: மாய்மம் (maaymam)
- Thai: (laenthānam)
- Turkish: lantan
- Ukrainian: лантан (lantán)
- Uzbek: лантан (lantan)
- Vietnamese: lantan
- Welsh: lanthanwm
- West Frisian: lanthaan
See also
External links
For etymology and more information refer to: http://elements.vanderkrogt.net/elem/la.html (A lot of the translations were taken from that site with permission from the author)Extensive Definition
Lanthanum () is a chemical
element with the symbol La and atomic
number 57.
Notable characteristics
Lanthanum is a silvery white metallic element that belongs to group 3 of the periodic table and is a lanthanide. Found in some rare-earth minerals, usually in combination with cerium and other rare earth elements. Lanthanum is malleable, ductile, and soft enough to be cut with a knife. It is one of the most reactive of the rare-earth metals. The metal reacts directly with elemental carbon, nitrogen, boron, selenium, silicon, phosphorus, sulfur, and with halogens. It oxidizes rapidly when exposed to air. Cold water attacks lanthanum slowly, while hot water attacks it much more rapidly.Applications
Uses of lanthanum:- Carbon lighting applications, especially by the motion picture industry for studio lighting and projection.
- La2O3
improves the alkali resistance of glass, and is used in making
special optical glasses, such as:
- Infrared absorbing glass.
- Camera and telescope lenses, because of the high refractive index and low dispersion of rare-earth glasses.
- Small amounts of lanthanum added to steel improves its malleability, resistance to impact and ductility.
- Small amounts of lanthanum added to iron helps to produce nodular cast iron.
- Small amounts of lanthanum added to molybdenum decreases the hardness of this metal and its sensitivity to temperature variations.
- Small amounts of lanthanum are present in many pool products to remove the phosphates that feed algae.
- Mischmetal, a pyrophoric alloy used e.g. in lighter flints, contains 25% to 45% lanthanum.
- Lanthanum oxide and the boride are used in electronic vacuum tubes as hot cathode materials with strong emissivity of electrons. Crystals of LaB6 are used in high brightness, extended life, thermionic electron emission sources for scanning electron microscopes.
- in Gas tungsten arc welding electrodes, as a substitute for radioactive thorium.
- Hydrogen sponge alloys can contain lanthanum. These alloys are capable of storing up to 400 times their own volume of hydrogen gas in a reversible adsorption process.
- Petroleum cracking catalysts.
- Gas lantern mantles.
- Glass and lapidary polishing compound.
- La-Ba age dating of rocks and ores.
- Lanthanum carbonate is used medically as a phosphate binder for the treatment of hyperphosphatemia. See details below under Biological Role.
- Lanthanum nitrate is mainly applied in specialty glass, water treatment and catalyst.
- Cerium activated Lanthanum bromide is the recent inorganic scintillator which has a combination of high light yield and the best energy resolution.
- Lanthanum fluoride is used with Europium flouride in the crystal membrane of Fluoride Ion-Selective Electrodes
- Lanthanum Oxide is used as a grain growth additive during the liquid phase sintering of silicon nitride.
- Like horseradish peroxidase, lanthanum is used as an electron-dense tracer in molecular biology.
History
Lanthanum was discovered in 1839 by Swedish chemist Carl Gustav Mosander, when he partially decomposed a sample of cerium nitrate by heating and treating the resulting salt with dilute nitric acid. From the resulting solution, he isolated a new rare earth he called lantana. Lanthanum was isolated in relatively pure form in 1923.The word lanthanum comes from the Greek λανθανω
[lanthanō] = to lie hidden.
Lanthanum is the most strongly basic of all the
trivalent lanthanides, and this property is what allowed Mosander
to isolate and purify the salts of this element. Basicity
separation as operated commercially involved the fractional
precipitation of the weaker bases (such as didymium) from nitrate solution
by the addition of magnesium oxide or dilute ammonia gas. Purified
lanthanum remained in solution. (The basicity methods were only
suitable for lanthanum purification; didymium could not be
efficiently further separated in this manner.) The alternative
technique of fractional crystallization was invented by Dimitry
Mendeleev himself, in the form of the double ammonium nitrate
tetrahydrate, which he used to separate the less-soluble lanthanum
from the more-soluble didymium in the 1870s. This system would be
used commercially in lanthanum purification until the development
of practical solvent extraction methods that started in the late
1950s. (A detailed process using the double ammonium nitrates to
provide 4N pure lanthanum, neodymium concentrates and praseodymium
concentrates is presented in Callow 1967, at a time when the
process was just becoming obsolete.) As operated for lanthanum
purification, the double ammonium nitrates were recrystallized from
water. When later adapted by Carl
Auer von Welsbach for the splitting of didymium, nitric acid
was used as solvent to lower the solubility of the system.
Lanthanum is relatively easy to purify, since it has only one
adjacent lanthanide, cerium, which itself is very readily removed
due to its potential tetravalency.
Biological role
Lanthanum has no known biological role. The element is not absorbed orally, and when injected its elimination is very slow. Lanthanum carbonate was approved as a medication (Fosrenol, Shire Pharmaceuticals) to absorb excess phosphate in cases of end-stage renal failure. Some rare-earth chlorides, such as lanthanum chloride (LaCl3), are known to have anticoagulant properties.While Lanthanum has pharmacological effects on
several receptors and ion channels, its specificity for the GABA
receptor is unique among divalent cations. Lanthanum acts at the
same modulatory site on the GABAR as zinc- a known negative
allosteric modulator. The Lanthanum cation La3+ is a positive
allosteric modulator at native and recombinant GABA receptors,
increasing open channel time and decreasing desensitization in a
subunit configuration dependent manner.
Occurrence
Although lanthanum belongs to chemical elements group called rare earth metals, it is not rare at all. Lanthanum is available in relatively large quantities (32 ppm in Earth’s crust). "Rare earths" got their name since they were indeed rare as compared to the "common" earths such as lime or magnesia, and historically only a few deposits were known.Monazite (Ce, La,
Th, Nd, Y)PO4, and bastnasite (Ce, La, Y)CO3F,
are the principal ores in which lanthanum occurs, in percentages of
up to 25 to 38 percent of the total lanthanide content. Lanthanum
is more generally enriched in bastnasite as opposed to monazite, in
commercial orebodies. Until 1949, bastnasite was a rare and obscure
mineral, not even remotely contemplated as a potential commercial
source for lanthanides. In that year, the vast deposit at Mountain
Pass California was discovered. This discovery alerted geologists
as to the existence of a whole new class of rare earth deposit, the
rare-earth bearing carbonatite, other examples of which soon
surfaced, particularly in Africa and China.
See also
:category:Lanthanide minerals
Isotopes
Naturally occurring lanthanum is composed of one stable (139La) and one radioactive (138La) isotope, with the stable isotope, 139La, being the most abundant (99.91% natural abundance). 38 radioisotopes have been characterized with the most stable being 138La with a half-life of 105×109 years, and 137La with a half-life of 60,000 years. Most of the remaining radioactive isotopes have half-lives that are less than 24 hours and the majority of these have half lives that are less than 1 minute. This element also has 3 meta states.The isotopes of lanthanum range in atomic
weight from 117 u
(117La) to 155 u (155La).
Precautions
Lanthanum has a low to moderate level of toxicity, and should be handled with care. In animals, the injection of lanthanum solutions produces glycaemia, low blood pressure, degeneration of the spleen and hepatic alterations.References
- Los Alamos National Laboratory – Lanthanum
- "The Industrial Chemistry of the Lanthanons, Yttrium, Thorium and Uranium", by R.J. Callow, Pergamon Press 1967
- "Chemistry of the Lanthanons", by R.C. Vickery, Butterworths 1953
- "Nouveau Traite de Chimie Minerale, Vol. VII. Scandium, Yttrium, Elements des Terres Rares, Actinium", P. Pascal, Editor, Masson & Cie 1959
- "Extractive Metallurgy of Rare Earths", by C.K. Gupta and N. Krishnamurthy, CRC Press 2005
See also
Lanthanum compoundsExternal links
lanthanum in Afrikaans: Lantaan
lanthanum in Arabic: لانثانوم
lanthanum in Bengali: ল্যান্থানাম
lanthanum in Belarusian: Лантан
lanthanum in Bosnian: Lantan
lanthanum in Catalan: Lantani
lanthanum in Chuvash: Лантан
lanthanum in Czech: Lanthan
lanthanum in Corsican: Lantaniu
lanthanum in Danish: Lanthan
lanthanum in German: Lanthan
lanthanum in Estonian: Lantaan
lanthanum in Modern Greek (1453-):
Λανθάνιο
lanthanum in Spanish: Lantano
lanthanum in Esperanto: Lantano
lanthanum in Basque: Lantano
lanthanum in French: Lanthane
lanthanum in Friulian: Lantani
lanthanum in Manx: Lantanum
lanthanum in Galician: Lantano
lanthanum in Korean: 란타넘
lanthanum in Armenian: Լանթան
lanthanum in Croatian: Lantan
lanthanum in Ido: Lantano
lanthanum in Indonesian: Lantanum
lanthanum in Italian: Lantanio
lanthanum in Hebrew: לנתן
lanthanum in Javanese: Lantanum
lanthanum in Haitian: Lantàn
lanthanum in Latin: Lanthanum
lanthanum in Latvian: Lantāns
lanthanum in Luxembourgish: Lanthan
lanthanum in Lithuanian: Lantanas
lanthanum in Lojban: jinmrlantano
lanthanum in Hungarian: Lantán
lanthanum in Malayalam: ലാന്തനം
lanthanum in Dutch: Lanthanium
lanthanum in Japanese: ランタン
lanthanum in Norwegian: Lantan
lanthanum in Norwegian Nynorsk: Lantan
lanthanum in Occitan (post 1500): Lantani
lanthanum in Polish: Lantan
lanthanum in Portuguese: Lantânio
lanthanum in Romanian: Lantan
lanthanum in Quechua: Lanthanu
lanthanum in Russian: Лантан
lanthanum in Sicilian: Lantaniu
lanthanum in Simple English: Lanthanum
lanthanum in Slovak: Lantán
lanthanum in Slovenian: Lantan
lanthanum in Serbian: Лантан
lanthanum in Serbo-Croatian: Lantan
lanthanum in Finnish: Lantaani
lanthanum in Swedish: Lantan
lanthanum in Tamil: லாந்த்தனம்
lanthanum in Thai: แลนทานัม
lanthanum in Vietnamese: Lantan
lanthanum in Turkish: Lantan
lanthanum in Ukrainian: Лантан
lanthanum in Chinese: 镧