holmium - definitie. Wat is holmium
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Wat (wie) is holmium - definitie

CHEMICAL ELEMENT WITH ATOMIC NUMBER 67
Element 67; Holmic; Philippium; Ho (element); Organoholmium compounds; Organoholmium; Holmium compound; Holmium compounds; Compounds of holmium; History of holmium
  • [[Gadolinite]]
  • A solution of 4% holmium oxide in 10% perchloric acid, permanently fused into a quartz [[cuvette]] as an optical calibration standard
  • Per Teodor Cleve in around 1885]]

Holmium         
·noun A rare element said to be contained in gadolinite.
holmium         
['h??lm??m]
¦ noun the chemical element of atomic number 67, a soft silvery-white metal of the lanthanide series. (Symbol: Ho)
Origin
C19: mod. L., from Holmia, Latinized form of Stockholm, the capital of Sweden (because holmium and related minerals are found there).
Holmium         
Holmium is a chemical element with the symbol Ho and atomic number 67. It is a rare-earth element and the eleventh member of the lanthanide series.

Wikipedia

Holmium

Holmium is a chemical element with the symbol Ho and atomic number 67. It is a rare-earth element and the eleventh member of the lanthanide series. It is a relatively soft, silvery, fairly corrosion-resistant and malleable metal. Like a lot of other lanthanides, holmium is too reactive to be found in native form, as pure holmium slowly forms a yellowish oxide coating when exposed to air. When isolated, holmium is relatively stable in dry air at room temperature. However, it reacts with water and corrodes readily, and also burns in air when heated.

In nature, holmium occurs together with the other rare-earth metals (like thulium). It is a relatively rare lanthanide, making up 1.4 parts per million of the Earth's crust, an abundance similar to tungsten. Holmium was discovered through isolation by Swedish chemist Per Theodor Cleve and independently by Jacques-Louis Soret and Marc Delafontaine, who observed it spectroscopically in 1878. Its oxide was first isolated from rare-earth ores by Cleve in 1878. The element's name comes from Holmia, the Latin name for the city of Stockholm.

Like many other lanthanides, holmium is found in the minerals monazite and gadolinite and is usually commercially extracted from monazite using ion-exchange techniques. Its compounds in nature and in nearly all of its laboratory chemistry are trivalently oxidized, containing Ho(III) ions. Trivalent holmium ions have fluorescent properties similar to many other rare-earth ions (while yielding their own set of unique emission light lines), and thus are used in the same way as some other rare earths in certain laser and glass-colorant applications.

Holmium has the highest magnetic permeability and magnetic saturation of any element and is thus used for the pole pieces of the strongest static magnets. Because holmium strongly absorbs neutrons, it is also used as a burnable poison in nuclear reactors.