Nickel - Element information, properties and uses (2024)

Transcript :

Chemistry in its element: nickel

(Promo)

You're listening to Chemistry in its element brought to you by Chemistry World, the magazine of the Royal Society of Chemistry.

(End promo)

Meera Senthilingam

This week even art galleries can spark chemical, or elemental, discussions. Andrea Sella.

Andrea Sella

Several years ago, I went with a friend to a small exhibition at London's National Gallery. It was a rare opportunity to see the masterpieces from the Doria Pamphilii gallery in Rome. The centrepiece was the famous portrait of Pope Innocent X by Velazquez, a spectacular snapshot of one of the most powerful men of his day, a tough-looking character in a gilded throne, sporting a neat goatee and a fierce and uncompromising glint in his eye.

Across from it were hung Francis Bacon's disturbing Three Screaming Popes, nightmarish variants on Velazquez' theme. The pictures were so ugly and brutal that I instinctively blinked and looked away, upwards. Unexpectedly, my eyes fell on a set of golden letters across the top of the doorway. I giggled and my friend said to me, 'what's so funny? These pictures are just awful.'

'Mond', I replied, 'fancy finding him here.'

'Who?' she asked, looking puzzled.

'Mond,' I replied. 'This gallery was endowed by Ludwig Mond, the chemist who made nickel available to the world.' I fully expected her to roll her eyes and give me that pitying look that women reserve for the moment when the real nerd in a man is finally revealed.

But there was none of that.

'I've never heard of him,' she said. 'Did he discover it?'

'No. He didn't. Nickel had been known for some time before that - it had been used in China and Peru to make a kind of steel. But it wasn't until the 19th century that two Swedish chemists, Cronstedt and Bergmann between them established that it was an element. It was named nickel after one of its ores, a reddish material that German miners called kupfernickel - St Nicholas's copper.'

'But isn't nickel rather nasty? Wasn't there some problem with nickel jewellery?' my friend asked.

'Yes. Nickel has long been used in alloys and to plate other metals - the nickel provides a tough resistant and shiny coating that protects the object from corrosion.'

'Oh, you mean a bit like chrome plating '.

'Yes, a bit like chrome, but less vulgar - chromium gives a brilliant shine. Nickel is a bit more subdued.'

'You mean classy.'

'I guess so. But the problem is that in contact with the skin, as in jewellery, the tiny amounts of nickel that dissolves in the sweat of the wearer was enough to cause skin reactions in some people and the using nickel turned out not to be a great idea.'

'But what about Mond?'

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'Oh yeah. Right.' I replied. 'Mond was a German chemist who moved to the UK. And he had a problem - he was passing carbon monoxide gas through nickel valves and these kept failing and leaking. What Mond and his assistant Langer discovered was something remarkable - that his valves were corroding because the metal reacted with carbon monoxide, to make a compound called nickel carbonyl.'

'So what?'

'Well nickel carbonyl turned out to be a very volatile colourless liquid, one that boils just below room temperature.'

'Hmmm. Sounds a bit nasty,' she said doubtfully.

'Oh yes. Very. Because it's so volatile, you need to be really careful when you handle it since if you inhale it, it will decompose releasing poisonous carbon monoxide and dumping metallic nickel into your lungs. So it's very dangerous indeed. But in a way, that's the beauty of it: nickel carbonyl is incredibly fragile. If you heat it up it shakes itself to pieces, and you get both the nickel and the carbon monoxide back. So what Mond had was a deliciously simple way to separate and purify nickel from any other metal. And what is more, he could recycle the carbon monoxide.'

'Wow.'

'Mond wasn't just an observant chemist. He was also a pretty savvy business man. He patented his process and set up in business to sell the purest nickel at prices far lower than anyone else. He made an absolute fortune, and then steadily expanded into other areas of chemistry. His firm would eventually form the core of Imperial Chemical Industries, ICI, the conglomerate set up to defend British interests against, ironically, the onslaught of the burgeoning German chemicals industry.'

'So what do people do with nickel today, if it's so nasty,' she asked.

'Well, it's not really that nasty, provided you're careful in what you use it for. In the 1960s another German chemist named Wilke developed nickel compounds as cheap and simple catalysts for the petrochemicals industry to clip together small carbon molecules. It's also used in all sorts of alloys. There's Invar which is a kind of metallic pyrex, that doesn't expand or contract when you change the temperature. There's Monel, a steel so corrosion resistant that it will withstand even fluorine, which eats its way through just about anything. And there's the really weird memory metal, an alloy that no matter how much you twist and bend it, remembers its original shape and returns to it. And then there's superalloys made of nickel and aluminium with a dab of boron that are extremely light and actually get tougher as you heat them - so they're used in aircraft and rocket turbines.'

I could see I was going a bit too far. We turned back to the Pope. 'He must have been a bruiser,' I said.

'You know what I like about you?' my friend asked giving my arm a squeeze. 'It's that we go to see paintings and I end up hearing about weird stuff.'

'And you know what I like about you,' I replied. 'It's that you humour me when I go off on one.'

No doubt you're expecting me to say that it all ended happily. It didn't, and I haven't seen her in years. But weirdly enough, every time I think of nickel, I think of her. And the filthy look the Pope gave me.

Meera Senthilingam

So superalloys, relationships and the pope, what diverse chemical thoughts and stories nickel provokes. That was UCL's Andrea Sella with a contemporary story to nickel. Now next week the discovery of xenon.

Peter Wothers

The story of xenon begins in 1894 when Lord Rayleigh and William Ramsay were investigating why nitrogen extracted from chemical compounds is about one-half per cent lighter than nitrogen extracted from the air - an observation first made by Henry Cavendish 100 years earlier. Ramsay found that after atmospheric nitrogen has reacted with hot magnesium metal, a tiny proportion of a heavier and even less reactive gas is left over. They named this gas argon from the Greek for lazy or inactive to reflect its extreme inertness. The problem was, where did this new element fit into Mendeleev's periodic table of the elements? There were no other known elements that it resembled which led them to suspect that there was a whole family of elements yet to be discovered. Remarkably, this turned out to be the case.

Meera Senthilingam

And to hear how this story paned out, leading to the discovery of a new family of elements as well as xenon that would go on to light our roads and propel spaceships join Cambridge University's Peter Wothers in next week's Chemistry in its element. Until then thank you for listening, I'm Meera Senthilingam

(Promo)

Chemistry in its element is brought to you by the Royal Society of Chemistry and produced bythenakedscientists.com. There's more information and other episodes of Chemistry in its element on our website atchemistryworld.org/elements.

(End promo)

Nickel
    - Element information, properties and uses (2024)

FAQs

Nickel - Element information, properties and uses? ›

A silvery metal that resists corrosion even at high temperatures. Nickel resists corrosion and is used to plate other metals to protect them. It is, however, mainly used in making alloys such as stainless steel. Nichrome is an alloy of nickel and chromium with small amounts of silicon, manganese and iron.

What are the properties of the element nickel? ›

Nickel is a hard silver white metal, which forms cubic crystals. It is malleable, ductile, and has superior strength and corrosion resistance. The metal is a fair conductor of heat and electricity and exhibits magnetic properties below 345°C.

What are 5 facts about nickel? ›

Fun Facts
  • Nickel is the 2nd most abundant element in the Earth's core.
  • Nickel is one of the most common skin allergens.
  • Nickel is ferromagnetic at room temperature.
  • Nickel is added to glass to give it a green color.
  • The name nickel comes from "kupfernickel", which is a German word meaning devil's copper or St.

What are 3 important uses of nickel? ›

Uses Of Nickel
  • The most crucial use of this element is that it is used to make coins.
  • It is used in making wires.
  • It is used in gas turbines and rocket engines as it has the capability to resist corrosion even at high temperatures.

What is the unique property of nickel? ›

It has a face-centred cubic crystal structure. Nickel is ferromagnetic up to 358 °C, or 676 °F (its Curie point). The metal is uniquely resistant to the action of alkalies and is frequently used for containers for concentrated solutions of sodium hydroxide.

How toxic is nickel to humans? ›

Acute ingestion of nickel compounds may cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, headache, cough and shortness of breath. In severe cases, ingestion of large amounts of a nickel compound may cause death.

Why is nickel so important? ›

The Nickel Institute says that nickel is highly ductile, corrosion and oxidation resistant and 100 percent recyclable. These characteristics make it essential for building infrastructure, chemical production, communications, energy supply, environmental protection and food preparation.

Why is nickel called Devil's copper? ›

Unearthed in the cobalt mines of Hälsingland, Sweden, miners mistakenly thought the ore contained copper, and when unable to extract copper from it they blamed their troubles on the devil. Hence, ore containing nickel became known as the 'devil's metal'.

What was nickel originally used for? ›

Nickel alloys were used to produce plate and chain armors during the Middle Ages, and the relative abundance of nickel-containing ores made it an inexpensive way to add a fine sheen to coin currency. But it wasn't until nickel's discovery in 1750 that this common metal additive was isolated and understood.

Is nickel toxic to touch? ›

Nickel (Ni) is a hard, silvery-white metal that may cause irritation to the skin. Exposure can harm the lungs, stomach, and kidneys. Exposure to nickel may lead to cancer.

Is nickel flammable? ›

Nickel powder and dust, and Raney Nickel, may form ignitable dust/air mixtures in closed tanks or containers. Very fine Nickel powder and dust, and Raney Nickel, react with AIR and can spontaneously ignite or produce flammable and explosive Hydrogen gas.

Why do humans need nickel? ›

Nickel is also an micronutritient essential for proper functioning of the human body, as it increases hormonal activity and is involved in lipid metabolism. This metal makes it's way to the human body through respiratory tract, digestive system and skin.

Why is nickel so valuable? ›

War Nickels: Made from 1942 to 1945, these have a higher silver content and are more valuable. Nickels with Errors: Any nickels with obvious minting errors can be valuable. Low Mintage Nickels: Coins produced in low quantities are always worth keeping.

What are 5 facts about the element nickel? ›

Nickel
  • Atomic Number: 28.
  • Atomic Weight: 58.6934.
  • Melting Point: 1728 K (1455°C or 2651°F)
  • Boiling Point: 3186 K (2913°C or 5275°F)
  • Density: 8.912 grams per cubic centimeter.
  • Element Classification: Metal.
  • Period Number: 4.
  • Group Number: 10.

Why is nickel the best element? ›

Nickel is a hard, silvery-white metal whose strength, ductility and resistance to heat and corrosion make it extremely useful for the development of a wide variety of materials — from wires to coins to military equipment.

What are the most useful properties of nickel? ›

Uses and properties

A silvery metal that resists corrosion even at high temperatures. Nickel resists corrosion and is used to plate other metals to protect them. It is, however, mainly used in making alloys such as stainless steel.

What are the physical properties of pure nickel? ›

Nickel - Properties, Fabrication and Applications of Commercially Pure Nickel
PropertyMinimum Value (S.I.)Maximum Value (S.I.)
Density8.838.95
Energy Content230690
Bulk Modulus162200
Compressive Strength70935
23 more rows

What are 2 attributes of a nickel? ›

What Are the Characteristics of Nickel?
  • Shiny silver-white lustrous appearance.
  • Very high resistance to corrosion and oxidation.
  • Versatile alloying agent, enhancing the properties of other metals, such as steel and copper with elevated strength, corrosion resistance, and heat tolerance.
Sep 16, 2023

What are the abilities of nickel? ›

A silvery metal that resists corrosion even at high temperatures. Nickel resists corrosion and is used to plate other metals to protect them. It is, however, mainly used in making alloys such as stainless steel.

Is the element nickel flammable? ›

Nickel powder and Raney Nickel are FLAMMABLE SOLIDS. Use dry sand, sodium chloride powder, graphite or an approved Class D extinguisher appropriate for extinguishing metal fires. DO NOT USE WATER directly on Nickel powder or Raney Nickel as flammable and explosive Hydrogen gas may be formed.

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