History
(L. Ruthenia, Russia) Berzelius and Osann in 1827 examined the residues left
after dissolving crude platinum from the Ural mountains in aqua regia. While
Berzelius found no unusual metals, Osann thought he found three new metals, one
of which he named ruthenium. In 1844 Klaus, generally recognized as the
discoverer, showed that Osann's ruthenium oxide was very impure and that it
contained a new metal. Klaus obtained 6 g of ruthenium from the portion of crude
platinum that is insoluble in aqua regia.
Sources
A member of the platinum group, ruthenium occurs native with other members of
the group in ores found in the Ural mountains and in North and South America. It
is also found along with other platinum metals in small but commercial
quantities in pentlandite of the Sudbury, Ontario, nickel-mining region, and in
pyroxinite deposits of South Africa.
Production
The metal is isolated commercially by a complex chemical process, the final
stage of which is the hydrogen reduction of ammonium ruthenium chloride, which
yields a powder. The powder is consolidated by powder metallurgy techniques or
by argon-arc welding.
Properties
Ruthenium is a hard, white metal and has four crystal modifications. It does
not tarnish at room temperatures, but oxidizes explosively. It is attacked by
halogens, hydroxides, etc. Ruthenium can be plated by electrodeposition or by
thermal decomposition methods. The metal is one of the most effective hardeners
for platinum and palladium, and is alloyed with these metals to make electrical
contacts for severe wear resistance. A ruthenium-molybdenum alloy is said to be
superconductive at 10.6 K. The corrosion resistance of titanium is improved a
hundredfold by addition of 0.1% ruthenium. It is a versatile catalyst. Hydrogen
sulfide can be split catalytically by light using an aqueous suspension of CdS
particles loaded with ruthenium dioxide. It is thought this may have application
to removal of H2S from oil refining and other industrial processes. Compounds in
at least eight oxidation states have been found, but of these, the +2, +3, and
+4 states are the most common. Ruthenium tetroxide, like osmium tetroxide, is
highly toxic. In addition, it may explode. Ruthenium compounds show a marked
resemblance to those of cadmium.
Cost
The metal is priced at about $30/g.
Page Source: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Last Updated: 12/19/97, CST Information Services Team
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