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Title: Chemistry/Elements/Rhenium - It's Elemental: Rhenium Basic physical and historical information.
LANL__Rhenium History, sources, properties, and uses.

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Rhenium Data tables and historic information.

USGS_Minerals_Information__Rhenium Statistics and information on the worldwide supply, demand, and flow of the element (PDF format).

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WebElements__Rhenium Extensive information on history, uses, occurrence, compounds, and properties.


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This is now2007.com cache of m/ as retrieved on 2008.12.04 now2007.com's cache is the snapshot that we took of the page as we crawled the web. The page may have changed since that time.
It's Elemental - The Element RheniumPrivacy and Security NoticeJefferson LabJefferson Lab HomeSearchContact JLabScience Education----------------------Science Education HomeTeacher ResourcesStudent ZoneGames and PuzzlesPrograms and EventsSearch EducationIt's ElementalPrevious ElementPrevious ElementTable of ElementsNext ElementNext Element 75ReRhenium186.207RheniumAtomic Number:75Atomic Weight:186.207Melting Point:3459 K (3186°C or 5767°F)Boiling Point:5869 K (5596°C or 10105°F)Density:20.8 grams per cubic centimeterPhase at Room Temperature:SolidElement Classification:MetalPeriod Number:6Group Number:7Group Name:noneWhat's in a name?From the Latin word for the Rhine River, Rhenus.Say what?Rhenium is pronounced as REE-ni-em.History and Uses:Rhenium was discovered by the German chemists Ida Tacke-Noddack, Walter Noddack and Otto Carl Berg in 1925. They detected rhenium spectroscopically in platinum ores and in the minerals columbite ((Fe, Mn, Mg)(Nb, Ta)2O6), gadolinite ((Ce, La, Nd, Y)2FeBe2Si2O10) and molybdenite (MoS2). Rhenium is present in these materials only in trace amounts. In 1928, Noddack and Berg were able to extract 1 gram of rhenium from 660 kilograms of molybdenite. Today, rhenium is obtained as a byproduct of refining molybdenum and copper.Rhenium is used in flash lamps for photography and for filaments in mass spectrographs and ion gages, but is most frequently used as an alloying agent in tungsten and molybdenum and as a catalyst for performing certain reactions to a type of hydrocarbon known as an olefin.Estimated Crustal Abundance:7×10-4 milligrams per kilogramEstimated Oceanic Abundance:4×10-6 milligrams per literNumber of Stable Isotopes:1(View all isotope data)Ionization Energy:7.88 eVOxidation States:+7, +6, +4Electron Shell Configuration:1s22s22p63s23p63d104s24p64d104f145s25p65d56s2This page is maintained by Steve Gagnon.Citation and linking information
 

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