All About
Rhodium
Chemical element, one of the platinum metals of Group
VIIIb of the periodic table, predominantly used as an alloying agent
to harden platinum. Rhodium is a precious, silver-white metal, with
a high reflectivity for light. It is not corroded or tarnished by
the atmosphere at room temperature and is frequently electroplated
onto metal objects and polished to give permanent, attractive surfaces
for jewelry and other decorative articles. The metal is also used
to produce reflecting surfaces for optical instruments.
Rhodium added to platinum in small amounts yields alloys that
are harder and lose weight at high temperatures even more slowly
than pure platinum. Such alloys are used for laboratory furnace
crucibles, spark-plug electrodes, and catalysts in very hot chemical
environments (including automobile catalytic converters). In the
industrial manufacture of nitric acid, gauze catalysts of rhodium–platinum
alloys are used because they can withstand the flame temperature
as ammonia is burned to nitric oxide. A wire of the alloy 10 percent
rhodium–90 percent platinum joined to a wire of pure platinum
forms an excellent thermocouple for measuring high temperatures
in an oxidizing atmosphere. The international temperature scale
is defined over the region from 660° to 1,063° C (1,220°
to 1,945° F) by the electromotive force of this thermocouple.
Rhodium is a rare element comprising up to 4.6 percent of native
platinum alloys. It also occurs in native alloys of iridium and
osmium: up to at least 11.25 percent in iridosmine and up to at
least 4.5 percent in siserskite. Rhodium is generally obtained commercially
as a by-product of the extraction of nickel and copper from their
ores.
Natural rhodium consists entirely of stable isotope rhodium-103.
The element was first isolated (1803) from crude platinum by the
English chemist and physicist William Hyde Wollaston, who named
it from the Greek rhodon (“rose”) for the red colour
of a number of its compounds. Rhodium is highly resistant to attack
by acids; the massive metal is not dissolved by hot concentrated
nitric or hydrochloric acids or even by aqua regia. The metal dissolves
in fused potassium hydrogen sulfate to yield a complex, water-soluble
sulfate K3Rh(SO4)3×12H2O or in hot concentrated sulfuric acid.
Rhodium chemistry centres chiefly on the +1 and +3 oxidation states;
a few compounds of the other positive oxidation states through +6
are recognized (with perhaps the exception of +2). All rhodium compounds
are readily reduced or decomposed by heating to yield the powdered
or sponge metal. Among these compounds rhodium trichloride, RhCl3
(in which rhodium is in the +3 state), is one of the most important.
It provides a starting material for many of the other rhodium compounds
in various oxidation states. In aqueous emulsions it can catalyze
a number of useful organic reactions.
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Diamonds National Jewelry Mfg., Inc.
42-44 Pocono Blvd. Mount Pocono PA 1-800-246-4436
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