Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Scandium Group Elements ionic radii

Scandium is very widely but thinly distributed and its only rich mineral is the rare thortveitite, Sc2Si20v (p. 348), found in Norway, but since scandium has only small-scale commercial use, and can be obtained as a byproduct in the extraction of other materials, this is not a critical problem. Yttrium and lanthanum are invariably associated with lanthanide elements, the former (Y) with the heavier or Yttrium group lanthanides in minerals such as xenotime, M "P04 and gadolinite, M M SijOio (M = Fe, Be), and the latter (La) with the lighter or cerium group lanthanides in minerals such as monazite, M P04 and bastnaesite, M C03F. This association of similar metals is a reflection of their ionic radii. While La is similar in size to the early lanthanides which immediately follow it in the periodic table, Y , because of the steady fall in ionic radius along the lanthanide series (p. 1234), is more akin to the later lanthanides. [Pg.945]


See other pages where Scandium Group Elements ionic radii is mentioned: [Pg.948]    [Pg.1458]    [Pg.4199]    [Pg.948]    [Pg.1056]    [Pg.4198]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.78]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.262 ]




SEARCH



Elemental ionic

Group 12 elements ionic radii

Groups ionic radius

Ionic elements

Ionic groups

Ionic radius

Scandium Group Elements

Scandium group

Scandium ionic radii

© 2024 chempedia.info