'Nickel' (
IPA: ) is a metallic
chemical element in the
periodic table that has the symbol 'Ni' and
atomic number 28.
Characteristics

Nickel
Nickel is a silvery white
metal that takes on a high polish. It belongs to the transition metals, and is hard and ductile. It occurs most usually in combination with
sulfur and
iron in
pentlandite, with
sulfur in millerite, with
arsenic in the mineral
nickeline, and with arsenic and
sulfur in
nickel glance.
[1][2][3]
Because of its permanence in air and its inertness to
oxidation, it is used in coins, for plating
iron,
brass, etc., for chemical apparatus, and in certain alloys, such as
German silver. It is magnetic, and is very frequently accompanied by
cobalt, both being found in
meteoric iron. It is chiefly valuable for the
alloys it forms, especially many
superalloys, and particularly
stainless steel.
Nickel is one of the five
ferromagnetic elements. However, the
U.S. "nickel" coin is not magnetic, because it actually is mostly (75%)
copper. The
Canadian nickel minted at various periods between 1922-81 was 99.9% nickel, and these are magnetic.
The most common
oxidation state of nickel is +2, though 0, +1, +3 and +4 Ni complexes are observed. It is also thought that a +6 oxidation state may exist, however, results are inconclusive.
The unit cell of nickel is a face centred cube with a lattice parameter of 0.356 nm giving a radius of the atom of 0.126 nm.
Nickel-62 is the most stable nuclide of all the existing elements; it is more stable even than
Iron-56.
History
The use of Nickel is ancient, and can be traced back as far as 3500 BC.
Bronzes from what is now Syria had a nickel content of up to 2%. Further, there are Chinese manuscripts suggesting that "
white copper" (i.e. baitung) was used in the Orient between 1700 and 1400 BC. However, because the ores of nickel were easily mistaken for ores of silver, any understanding of this metal and its use dates to more contemporary times.
Minerals containing nickel (e.g. kupfernickel, meaning copper of the devil ("Nick"), or false copper) were of value for colouring glass green. In 1751, Baron
Axel Fredrik Cronstedt was attempting to extract copper from kupfernickel (now called niccolite), and obtained instead a white metal that he called nickel.
In the United States, the term "nickel" or "nick" was originally applied to the copper-nickel Indian cent coin introduced in 1859. Later, the name designated the three-cent coin introduced in 1865, and the following year the
five-cent shield nickel appropriated the designation, which has remained ever since. Coins of pure nickel were first used in 1881 in
Switzerland.
[1]
Biological role
Although not recognized until the 1970s, nickel plays numerous roles in biology. In fact
urease (an enzyme which assists in the hydrolysis of
urea) contains nickel. The NiFe-
hydrogenases contain nickel in addition to
iron-sulfur clusters. Such [NiFe]-hydrogenases characteristically oxidise H
2. A nickel-tetrapyrrole coenzyme,
F430, is present in the methyl
coenzyme M reductase which powers
methanogenic
archaea.
One of the carbon monoxide dehydrogenase enzymes consists of an Fe-Ni-S cluster.
[4]
Other nickel-containing enzymes include a class of
superoxide dismutase[5] and a
glyoxalase.
[6]
Occurrence
The bulk of the nickel mined comes from two types of
ore deposits. The first are
laterites where the principal ore minerals are nickeliferous
limonite: (Fe, Ni)O(OH) and
garnierite (a hydrous nickel silicate): (Ni, Mg)
3Si
2O
5(OH). The second are magmatic sulfide deposits where the principal ore mineral is
pentlandite: (Ni, Fe)
9S
8.
★ ''see
Ore genesis, ''
In terms of supply, the
Sudbury region of
Ontario,
Canada, produces about 30 percent of the world's supply of nickel. The
Sudbury Basin deposit is theorized to have been created by a massive
meteorite impact event early in the
geologic history of Earth. Russia contains about 40% of the world's known resources at the massive
Norilsk deposit in
Siberia. The Russian mining company
MMC Norilsk Nickel mines this for the world market, as well as the associated
palladium. Other major deposits of nickel are found in
New Caledonia,
Australia,
Cuba, and
Indonesia. The deposits in tropical areas are typically laterites which are produced by the intense weathering of
ultramafic igneous rocks and the resulting secondary concentration of nickel bearing oxide and
silicate minerals. A recent development has been the exploitation of a deposit in western
Turkey, especially convenient for European smelters, steelmakers and factories. The one locality in the United States where nickel is commercially mined is
Riddle, Oregon, where several square miles of nickel-bearing garnierite surface deposits are located.
Based on
geophysical evidence, most of the nickel on Earth is postulated to be concentrated in the
Earth's core.
Applications
Nickel is used in many industrial and consumer products, including stainless steel, magnets, coinage, and special alloys. It is also used for plating and as a green tint in glass. Nickel is pre-eminently an alloy metal, and its chief use is in the nickel steels and nickel cast irons, of which there are innumberable varieties. It is also widely used for many other alloys, such as nickel brasses and bronzes, and alloys with copper, chromium, aluminum, lead, cobalt, silver, and gold.
Nickel consumption can be summarized as: nickel steels (60%), nickel-copper alloys and nickel silver (14%), malleable nickel, nickel clad and Inconel (9%), plating (6%), nickel cast irons (3%), heat and electric resistance alloys (3%), nickel brasses and bronzes (2%), others (3%).
In the laboratory, nickel is frequently used as a catalyst for
hydrogenation, most often using
Raney nickel, a finely divided form of the metal.
Extraction and purification
2.PNG)
Nickel output in 2005
Nickel can be recovered using
extractive metallurgy. Most sulfide ores have traditionally been processed using
pyrometallurgical techniques to produce a
matte for further refining. Recent advances in
hydrometallurgy have resulted in recent nickel processing operations being developed using these processes. Most sulphide deposits have traditionally been processed by concentration through a
froth flotation process followed by
pyrometallurgical extraction. Recent advances in hydrometallurgical processing of sulphides has led to some recent projects being built around this technology.
Nickel is extracted from its ores by conventional roasting and reduction processes which yield a metal of >75% purity. Final purification in the
Mond process to >99.99% purity This process was patented by L. Mond and was used in South Wales in the 20th century. Nickel is reacted with carbon monoxide at around 50 degrees Celsius to form volatile nickel carbonyl. Any impurities remain solid. The nickel carbonyl gas is passed into a large chamber at high temperatures which tens of thousands of nickel spheres are maintained in constant motion. The
nickel carbonyl decomposes depositing pure nickel onto the nickel spheres (known as pellets). Alternatively, the nickel carbonyl may be decomposed in a smaller chamber at 230 degrees Celsius to create fine powders. The resultant carbon monoxide is re-circulated through the process. The highly pure nickel produced by this process is known as ''carbonyl nickel''. A second common form of refining involves the leaching of the metal matte followed by the electro-winning of the nickel from solution by plating it onto a cathode. In many stainless steel applications, the nickel can be taken directly in the 75% purity form, depending on the presence of any impurities.
In 2005,
Russia was the largest producer of nickel with about one-fifth world share closely followed by
Canada,
Australia and
Indonesia, reports the
British Geological Survey.
Compounds
★
Kamacite is a naturally occurring
alloy of
iron and nickel, usually in the proportion of 90:10 to 95:5 although impurities such as
cobalt or
carbon may be present. Kamacite occurs in nickel-iron meteorites.
''See also .''
Isotopes
Main articles: Isotopes of nickel
Naturally occurring nickel is composed of 5 stable
isotopes;
58Ni,
60Ni,
61Ni,
62Ni and
64Ni with
58Ni being the most abundant (68.077%
natural abundance). 18
radioisotopes have been characterised with the most stable being
59Ni with a
half-life of 76,000 years,
63Ni with a half-life of 100.1 years, and
56Ni with a half-life of 6.077 days. All of the remaining
radioactive isotopes have half-lives that are less than 60 hours and the majority of these have half-lives that are less than 30 seconds. This element also has 1
meta state.
Nickel-56 is produced in large quantities in type Ia
supernovae and the shape of the
light curve of these supernovae corresponds to the decay of nickel-56 to
cobalt-56 and then to
iron-56.
Nickel-59 is a long-lived
cosmogenic radionuclide with a half-life of 76,000 years.
59Ni has found many applications in
isotope geology.
59Ni has been used to date the terrestrial age of
meteorites and to determine abundances of extraterrestrial dust in ice and
sediment. Nickel-60 is the daughter product of the extinct radionuclide
60Fe (half-life = 1.5 Myr). Because the extinct radionuclide
60Fe had such a long half-life, its persistence in materials in the
solar system at high enough concentrations may have generated observable variations in the isotopic composition of
60Ni. Therefore, the abundance of
60Ni present in extraterrestrial material may provide insight into the origin of the solar system and its early history.
Nickel-62 has the highest
binding energy per nucleon of any isotope for any element. Isotopes heavier than
62Ni cannot be formed by
nuclear fusion without losing energy.
Nickel-48, discovered in 1999, is the most proton-rich nickel isotope known . With 28
protons and 20
neutrons
48Ni is "
doubly magic" (like
208Pb) and therefore unusually stable
[7].
The isotopes of nickel range in
atomic weight from 48
u (48-Ni) to 78 u (78-Ni). Nickel-78's half-life was recently measured to be 110 milliseconds and is believed to be an important isotope involved in
supernova nucleosynthesis of elements heavier than iron.
[2]
Precautions
Exposure to nickel metal and soluble compounds should not exceed 0.05 mg/cm³ in nickel equivalents per 40-hour work week. Nickel sulfide fume and dust is believed to be
carcinogenic, and various other nickel compounds may be as well.
[8][9]
Nickel carbonyl, [Ni(CO)
4], is an extremely toxic gas. The toxicity of metal carbonyls is a function of both the toxicity of a metal as well as the carbonyl's ability to give off highly toxic
carbon monoxide gas, and this one is no exception. It is explosive in air.
Sensitised individuals may show an
allergy to nickel affecting their skin. The amount of nickel which is allowed in products which come into contact with human skin is regulated by the
European Union. In 2002 researchers found amounts of nickel being emitted by 1 and 2
Euro coins far in excess of those standards. This is believed to be due to a
galvanic reaction.
[10]
Metal Value
As of
April 5,
2007 nickel was trading at 52,300 $US/
mt (52.30 $US/kg, 23.51 $US/lb or 1.47 $US/oz),
[3] [4]. Interestingly, the
US nickel coin contains 0.04 oz (1.25g) of nickel, which at this new price is worth 6.5 cents, along with 3.75 grams of copper worth about 3 cents, making the metal value over 9 cents. Since a nickel is worth 5 cents, this made it an attractive target for melting by people wanting to sell the metals at a profit. However, the
United States Mint, in anticipation of this practice, implemented new interim rules on
December 14,
2006, subject to public comment for 30 days, which criminalize the melting and export of cents and nickels.
[5] Violators can be punished with a fine of up to US$10,000 and/or imprisoned for a maximum of five years.
References
1. Los Alamos National Laboratory – Nickel
2. National Pollutant Inventory - Nickel and compounds Fact Sheet
3. High nickel release from 1- and 2-euro coins (''Nature'' Abstract)
4. Jaouen, G., Ed. Bioorganometallics: Biomolecules, Labeling, Medicine; Wiley-VCH: Weinheim, 2006
5. Szilagyi, R. K. Bryngelson, P. A.; Maroney, M. J.; Hedman, B.; Hodgson, K. O.; Solomon, E. I."S K-Edge X-ray Absorption Spectroscopic Investigation of the Ni-Containing Superoxide Dismutase Active Site: New Structural Insight into the Mechanism" Journal of the American Chemical Society 2004, volume 126, 3018-3019.
6. Thornalley, P. J., "Glyoxalase I--structure, function and a critical role in the enzymatic defence against glycation", Biochemical Society Transactions, 2003, 31, 1343-8.
7. Twice-magic metal makes its debut - isotope of nickel
8. KS Kasprzak, FW Sunderman Jr, K Salnikow. ''Nickel carcinogenesis.'' Mutation Research. 2003 Dec 10;533(1-2):67-97.
9. JK Dunnick, MR Elwell, AE Radovsky, JM Benson, FF Hahn, KJ Nikula, EB Barr, CH Hobbs. ''Comparative Carcinogenic Effects of Nickel Subsulfide, Nickel Oxide, or Nickel Sulfate Hexahydrate Chronic Exposures in the Lung.'' Cancer Research. 1995 Nov 15;55(22):5251-6.
10. O Nestle, H Speidel, MO Speidel. ''High nickel release from 1- and 2-euro coins.'' Nature. 419, 132 (12 September 2002). free abstract
External links
★
WebElements.com – Ni (also used as a reference)