
Page Index
Background
Name
Sources
Uses
Substitutes and
Alternative Sources
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Nickel: Vital as an alloying
constituent of stainless steel, plays key role in the
chemical and aerospace industries. Leading producers include
Australia, Canada, Norway and Russia. Large reserves are
found in Australia, Cuba, New Caledonia, Canada, Indonesia,
the Philippines, and Russia. |
Background
Nickel, with a symbol of Ni, is a silvery shiny,
metallic element with an atomic number of 28. It can be hammered
into thin sheets, which means it is malleable. Nickel, iron and
cobalt are the only three elements known to be ferro-magnetic. Of
the three, nickel is the least magnetic. When all three ferro-magnetic
metals are alloyed together, an unusually strong magnet is created.
This alloy conducts heat and electricity fairly well, but is not as
good a conductor as pure silver or copper.
In 1751, Axel Fredrik Cronstedt of Sweden
attempted to extract copper from the mineral niccolite and to his
surprise got a silvery-white metal, instead of the copper. He named
the new metal nickel after the mineral name of niccolite. This was
the first discovery of nickel in the western world, but an alloy of
copper, nickel and zinc - paitung or paktong - was used in China as
far back as 235 B.C.E. for utensils and other metal ware.
The presence of elemental nickel in iron-nickel
meteorites distinguishes them from rocks or minerals produced in the
Earth. The amount of nickel in these meteorites ranges from 5% to
almost 20%. When they are sliced and etched with acid, a pattern of
intergrown crystals is revealed. This is called a widmanstatten
pattern. This texture of the iron-nickel meteorites suggests they
cooled and crystallized very, very slowly deep inside asteroids.
Trace amounts of nickel are important to a number
of species of animals. It plays a role, along with iron, in the
transport of oxygen in the blood. Nickel deficiency has been shown
to reduce iron uptake in young pigs.
Nickel is also important to the proper function
of some enzymes in both plants and animals. Experiments on rats have
shown that insufficient nickel leads to liver damage. Nickel is
involved in the transmission of genetic code - DNA, RNA, etc. it is
also present in certain enzymes that metabolize sugar. Oats and
other whole grains are an excellent source of nickel.
Scientists who study seismic waves from
earthquakes, have determined that the core of the Earth consists of
a liquid outer core and a solid inner core composed of an
iron-nickel mixture.
Name
From very early times nickel-bearing minerals,
such as niccolite, were mixed with glass to create green glass. This
was called kupfernickel which means Devil’s Copper. When nickel was
extracted from niccolite, the mineral name was a logical source of
the name for the element, nickel.
Sources
Although today it is not profitable to mine
nickel in the U.S., small amounts of by-product nickel are being
recovered from copper and palladium-platinum ores in the Western
United States.
Approximately 87,000 tons of nickel is recovered
annually by recycling stainless steel and other nickel-iron alloys.
This represents about 39% of the nickel used each year.
It is estimated that there is about 140 million
tons of nickel available in identified deposits. Eighty-four million
tons, or 60 percent of the total available nickel is in laterite
deposits. A deposit in which rain and surface water leached
nickel-rich rock and concentrated the nickel at or near the surface
of the Earth is a laterite deposit. Nickel sulfide deposits contain
the remaining forty percent (56 million tons).
Demand for nickel in the United States is much
higher than what recycled nickel can provide, so nickel is imported
into the country. Most of the imported nickel comes from Canada
(40%), while the rest is imported from Norway (13%), Russia (12%),
Australia (10%), and various other nations (25%).
Uses
In the United States, large amounts of nickel
(42% of consumption in 2001) are used in the specialty steel
industry for stainless steel and related alloys. In 1913, Harry
Brearly, an English scientist, was the first to produced stainless
steel, when he accidentally discovered that the addition of chromium
to steel makes the steel resistant to staining. Today, stainless
steel also contains some molybdenum, titanium and nickel, to
increase its resistance to corrosion.
Thirty-eight percent of annual nickel use is in
nonferrous alloys (or mixed with metals other than steel) and
superalloys (metal mixtures designed to withstand extremely high
temperatures and/or pressures, or to have high electrical
conductivity). Nickel is used as a coating on other metals to slow
down corrosion. Nickel coatings accounts for 14% of nickel use.
The remaining 6% of the annual nickel use is for
a variety of purposes including the production of coins,
nickel-cadmium and nickel-metal hydride batteries; as a catalyst for
certain chemical reactions; and, as a colorant, nickel is added to
glass to give it a green color. The U.S. 5-cent piece is called a
"nickel" because it only contains 25% nickel. The other 75% is
copper.
Rechargeable nickel-hydride batteries are widely
used for cellular phones, video cameras, and other electronic
devices. Nickel-cadmium batteries are used primarily to power
cordless tools and appliances.
Substitutes and
Alternative Sources
Manganese crusts and nodules on the ocean floor
could be a valuable source of nickel someday. These deposits contain
manganese and other metal ions, such as nickel. Some deposits appear
to have formed when superhot liquids from deep sea volcanoes came in
contact with the very cold deep ocean water causing the metals to
precipitate and collect on the ocean floor. Other deposits far from
subduction zones may have formed when microorganisms in the sea
water accelerated the precipitation of dissolved iron and manganese.
Today, it is too expensive to mine the deposits, but as the surface
nickel deposits are used up, the value of nickel may increase and
make it profitable to retrieve these manganese nodules.
There are a number of materials that could be
used in place of nickel, but generally, these substitutes are more
expensive than nickel and/or less effective. Aluminum, plastics or
coated steel could be used in place of stainless steel in some
situations. Titanium can be used in place of nickel to make some
superalloys.
Source:
http://www.mii.org/Minerals/photonickl.htmll |