fbpx
Wikipedia

Bismuth

Bismuth is a chemical element; it has symbol Bi and atomic number 83. It is a post-transition metal and one of the pnictogens, with chemical properties resembling its lighter group 15 siblings arsenic and antimony. Elemental bismuth occurs naturally, and its sulfide and oxide forms are important commercial ores. The free element is 86% as dense as lead. It is a brittle metal with a silvery-white color when freshly produced. Surface oxidation generally gives samples of the metal a somewhat rosy cast. Further oxidation under heat can give bismuth a vividly iridescent appearance due to thin-film interference. Bismuth is both the most diamagnetic element and one of the least thermally conductive metals known.

Bismuth, 83Bi
Bismuth
Pronunciation/ˈbɪzməθ/ (BIZ-məth)
Appearancelustrous brownish silver
Standard atomic weight Ar°(Bi)
Bismuth in the periodic table
Hydrogen Helium
Lithium Beryllium Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine Neon
Sodium Magnesium Aluminium Silicon Phosphorus Sulfur Chlorine Argon
Potassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine Krypton
Rubidium Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenium Rhodium Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine Xenon
Caesium Barium Lanthanum Cerium Praseodymium Neodymium Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury (element) Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium Astatine Radon
Francium Radium Actinium Thorium Protactinium Uranium Neptunium Plutonium Americium Curium Berkelium Californium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Nobelium Lawrencium Rutherfordium Dubnium Seaborgium Bohrium Hassium Meitnerium Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium Nihonium Flerovium Moscovium Livermorium Tennessine Oganesson
Sb

Bi

Mc
leadbismuthpolonium
Atomic number (Z)83
Groupgroup 15 (pnictogens)
Periodperiod 6
Block  p-block
Electron configuration[Xe] 4f14 5d10 6s2 6p3
Electrons per shell2, 8, 18, 32, 18, 5
Physical properties
Phase at STPsolid
Melting point544.7 K ​(271.5 °C, ​520.7 °F)
Boiling point1837 K ​(1564 °C, ​2847 °F)
Density (near r.t.)9.78 g/cm3
when liquid (at m.p.)10.05 g/cm3
Heat of fusion11.30 kJ/mol
Heat of vaporization179 kJ/mol
Molar heat capacity25.52 J/(mol·K)
Vapor pressure
P (Pa) 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 k
at T (K) 941 1041 1165 1325 1538 1835
Atomic properties
Oxidation states−3, −2, −1, 0,[3] +1, +2, +3, +4, +5 (a mildly acidic oxide)
ElectronegativityPauling scale: 2.02
Ionization energies
  • 1st: 703 kJ/mol
  • 2nd: 1610 kJ/mol
  • 3rd: 2466 kJ/mol
  • (more)
Atomic radiusempirical: 156 pm
Covalent radius148±4 pm
Van der Waals radius207 pm
Spectral lines of bismuth
Other properties
Natural occurrenceprimordial
Crystal structurerhombohedral[4]
Thermal expansion13.4 µm/(m⋅K) (at 25 °C)
Thermal conductivity7.97 W/(m⋅K)
Electrical resistivity1.29 µΩ⋅m (at 20 °C)
Magnetic orderingdiamagnetic
Molar magnetic susceptibility−280.1×10−6 cm3/mol[5]
Young's modulus32 GPa
Shear modulus12 GPa
Bulk modulus31 GPa
Speed of sound thin rod1790 m/s (at 20 °C)
Poisson ratio0.33
Mohs hardness2.25
Brinell hardness70–95 MPa
CAS Number7440-69-9
History
DiscoveryArabic alchemists (before AD 1000)
Isotopes of bismuth
Main isotopes[6] Decay
abun­dance half-life (t1/2) mode pro­duct
207Bi synth 31.55 y β+ 207Pb
208Bi synth 3.68×105 y β+ 208Pb
209Bi 100% 2.01×1019 y α 205Tl
210Bi trace 5.012 d β 210Po
α 206Tl
210mBi synth 3.04×106 y IT 210Bi
α 206Tl
 Category: Bismuth
| references

Bismuth was long considered the element with the highest atomic mass whose nuclei do not spontaneously decay. However, in 2003 it was discovered to be extremely weakly radioactive. The metal's only primordial isotope, bismuth-209, undergoes alpha decay with a half-life about a billion times the estimated age of the universe.[7][8]

Bismuth metal has been known since ancient times. Before modern analytical methods bismuth's metallurgical similarities to lead and tin often led it to be confused with those metals. The etymology of "bismuth" is uncertain. The name may come from mid-sixteenth century Neo-Latin translations of the German words weiße Masse or Wismuth, meaning 'white mass', which were rendered as bisemutum or bisemutium.

Main uses edit

Bismuth compounds account for about half the global production of bismuth. They are used in cosmetics; pigments; and a few pharmaceuticals, notably bismuth subsalicylate, used to treat diarrhea.[8] Bismuth's unusual propensity to expand as it solidifies is responsible for some of its uses, as in the casting of printing type.[8] Bismuth, when in its elemental form, has unusually low toxicity for a heavy metal.[8] As the toxicity of lead and the cost of its environmental remediation became more apparent during the 20th century, suitable bismuth alloys have gained popularity as replacements for lead. Presently, around a third of global bismuth production is dedicated to needs formerly met by lead.

History and etymology edit

Bismuth metal has been known since ancient times and it was one of the first 10 metals to have been discovered. The name bismuth dates to around 1665 and is of uncertain etymology. The name possibly comes from obsolete German Bismuth, Wismut, Wissmuth (early 16th century), perhaps related to Old High German hwiz ("white").[9] The Neo-Latin bisemutium (coined by Georgius Agricola, who Latinized many German mining and technical words) is from the German Wismuth, itself perhaps from weiße Masse, meaning "white mass".[10][11]

The element was confused in early times with tin and lead because of its resemblance to those elements. Because bismuth has been known since ancient times, no one person is credited with its discovery. Agricola (1546) states that bismuth is a distinct metal in a family of metals including tin and lead. This was based on observation of the metals and their physical properties.[12]

Miners in the age of alchemy also gave bismuth the name tectum argenti, or "silver being made" in the sense of silver still in the process of being formed within the Earth.[13][14][15]

Bismuth was also known to the Incas and used (along with the usual copper and tin) in a special bronze alloy for knives.[16]

 
Alchemical symbol used by Torbern Bergman (1775)

Beginning with Johann Heinrich Pott in 1738,[17] Carl Wilhelm Scheele, and Torbern Olof Bergman, the distinctness of lead and bismuth became clear, and Claude François Geoffroy demonstrated in 1753 that this metal is distinct from lead and tin.[14][18][19]

Characteristics edit

 
Left: A bismuth hopper crystal exhibiting the stairstep crystal structure and iridescent colors, which are produced by interference of light within the oxide film on its surface. Right: a 1 cm3 cube of unoxidised bismuth metal

Physical characteristics edit

 
Pressure-temperature phase diagram of bismuth. TC refers to the superconducting transition temperature

Bismuth is a brittle metal with a dark, silver-pink hue, often with an iridescent oxide tarnish showing many colors from yellow to blue. The spiral, stair-stepped structure of bismuth crystals is the result of a higher growth rate around the outside edges than on the inside edges. The variations in the thickness of the oxide layer that forms on the surface of the crystal cause different wavelengths of light to interfere upon reflection, thus displaying a rainbow of colors. When burned in oxygen, bismuth burns with a blue flame and its oxide forms yellow fumes.[18] Its toxicity is much lower than that of its neighbors in the periodic table, such as lead and antimony.[20]

No other metal is verified to be more naturally diamagnetic than bismuth.[18][21] (Superdiamagnetism is a different physical phenomenon.) Of any metal, it has one of the lowest values of thermal conductivity (after manganese, neptunium and plutonium) and the highest Hall coefficient.[22] It has a high electrical resistivity.[18] When deposited in sufficiently thin layers on a substrate, bismuth is a semiconductor, despite being a post-transition metal.[23] Elemental bismuth is denser in the liquid phase than the solid, a characteristic it shares with germanium, silicon, gallium, and water.[24] Bismuth expands 3.32% on solidification; therefore, it was long a component of low-melting typesetting alloys, where it compensated for the contraction of the other alloying components[18][25][26][27] to form almost isostatic bismuth-lead eutectic alloys.

Though virtually unseen in nature, high-purity bismuth can form distinctive, colorful hopper crystals. It is relatively nontoxic and has a low melting point just above 271 °C, so crystals may be grown using a household stove, although the resulting crystals will tend to be of lower quality than lab-grown crystals.[28]

At ambient conditions, bismuth shares the same layered structure as the metallic forms of arsenic and antimony,[29] crystallizing in the rhombohedral lattice[30] (Pearson symbol hR6, space group R3m No. 166) of the trigonal crystal system.[4] When compressed at room temperature, this Bi-I structure changes first to the monoclinic Bi-II at 2.55 GPa, then to the tetragonal Bi-III at 2.7 GPa, and finally to the body-centered cubic Bi-V at 7.7 GPa. The corresponding transitions can be monitored via changes in electrical conductivity; they are rather reproducible and abrupt and are therefore used for calibration of high-pressure equipment.[31][32]

Chemical characteristics edit

Bismuth is stable to both dry and moist air at ordinary temperatures. When red-hot, it reacts with water to make bismuth(III) oxide.[33]

2 Bi + 3 H2O → Bi2O3 + 3 H2

It reacts with fluorine to make bismuth(V) fluoride at 500 °C or bismuth(III) fluoride at lower temperatures (typically from Bi melts); with other halogens it yields only bismuth(III) halides.[34][35][36] The trihalides are corrosive and easily react with moisture, forming oxyhalides with the formula BiOX.[37]

4 Bi + 6 X2 → 4 BiX3 (X = F, Cl, Br, I)
4 BiX3 + 2 O2 → 4 BiOX + 4 X2

Bismuth dissolves in concentrated sulfuric acid to make bismuth(III) sulfate and sulfur dioxide.[33]

6 H2SO4 + 2 Bi → 6 H2O + Bi2(SO4)3 + 3 SO2

It reacts with nitric acid to make bismuth(III) nitrate (which decomposes into nitrogen dioxide when heated[38]).[39]

Bi + 6 HNO3 → 3 H2O + 3 NO2 + Bi(NO3)3

It also dissolves in hydrochloric acid, but only with oxygen present.[33]

4 Bi + 3 O2 + 12 HCl → 4 BiCl3 + 6 H2O

Isotopes edit

The only primordial isotope of bismuth, bismuth-209, was traditionally regarded as the heaviest stable isotope, but it had long been suspected[40] to be unstable on theoretical grounds. This was finally demonstrated in 2003, when researchers at the Institut d'Astrophysique Spatiale in Orsay, France, measured the alpha emission half-life of 209
Bi
to be 2.01×1019 years (3 Bq/Mg),[41][42] over a billion times longer than the current estimated age of the universe.[8] Owing to its extraordinarily long half-life, for all presently known medical and industrial applications, bismuth can be treated as if it is stable and nonradioactive. The radioactivity is of academic interest because bismuth is one of a few elements whose radioactivity was suspected and theoretically predicted before being detected in the laboratory.[8] Bismuth has the longest known alpha decay half-life, although tellurium-128 has a double beta decay half-life of over 2.2×1024 years.[42] Bismuth's extremely long half-life means that less than approximately one-billionth of the bismuth present at the formation of the planet Earth would have decayed into thallium since then.

Six isotopes of bismuth with short half-lives (210 through 215 inclusive) occur within the natural radioactive disintegration chains of actinium, radium, thorium, and neptunium, and more have been synthesized experimentally. (Although all primordial 237Np has long since decayed, it is continually regenerated by (n,2n) knockout reactions on natural 238U.)[43][44]

Commercially, the radioactive isotope bismuth-213 can be produced by bombarding radium with bremsstrahlung photons from a linear particle accelerator. In 1997, an antibody conjugate with bismuth-213, which has a 45-minute half-life and decays with the emission of an alpha particle, was used to treat patients with leukemia. This isotope has also been tried in cancer treatment, for example, in the targeted alpha therapy (TAT) program.[45][46]

Chemical compounds edit

 
Bismuth(III) oxide powder

Bismuth forms trivalent and pentavalent compounds, the trivalent ones being more common. Many of its chemical properties are similar to those of arsenic and antimony, although they are less toxic than derivatives of those lighter elements.[20]

Oxides and sulfides edit

At elevated temperatures, the vapors of the metal combine rapidly with oxygen, forming the yellow trioxide, Bi
2
O
3
.[24][47] When molten, at temperatures above 710 °C, this oxide corrodes any metal oxide and even platinum.[36] On reaction with a base, it forms two series of oxyanions: BiO
2
, which is polymeric and forms linear chains, and BiO3−
3
. The anion in Li
3
BiO
3
is a cubic octameric anion, Bi
8
O24−
24
, whereas the anion in Na
3
BiO
3
is tetrameric.[48]

The dark red bismuth pentoxide, Bi
2
O
5
, is unstable, liberating O
2
gas upon heating.[49] The compound NaBiO3 is a strong oxidising agent.[50]

Bismuth sulfide, Bi
2
S
3
, occurs naturally in bismuth ores.[51] It is also produced by the combination of molten bismuth and sulfur.[35]

 
Bismuth oxychloride (BiOCl) structure (mineral bismoclite). Bismuth atoms are shown as grey, oxygen red, chlorine green.

Bismuth oxychloride (BiOCl, see figure at right) and bismuth oxynitrate (BiONO3) stoichiometrically appear as simple anionic salts of the bismuthyl(III) cation (BiO+) which commonly occurs in aqueous bismuth compounds. However, in the case of BiOCl, the salt crystal forms in a structure of alternating plates of Bi, O, and Cl atoms, with each oxygen coordinating with four bismuth atoms in the adjacent plane. This mineral compound is used as a pigment and cosmetic (see below).[52]

Bismuthine and bismuthides edit

Unlike the lighter pnictogens nitrogen, phosphorus, and arsenic, but similar to antimony, bismuth does not form a stable hydride. Bismuth hydride, bismuthine (BiH
3
), is an endothermic compound that spontaneously decomposes at room temperature. It is stable only below −60 °C.[48] Bismuthides are intermetallic compounds between bismuth and other metals,[53] such as neodymium.[54]

In 2014 researchers discovered that sodium bismuthide can exist as a form of matter called a “three-dimensional topological Dirac semi-metal” (3DTDS) that possess 3D Dirac fermions in bulk. It is a natural, three-dimensional counterpart to graphene with similar electron mobility and velocity. Graphene and topological insulators (such as those in 3DTDS) are both crystalline materials that are electrically insulating inside but conducting on the surface, allowing them to function as transistors and other electronic devices. While sodium bismuthide (Na
3
Bi
) is too unstable to be used in devices without packaging, it can demonstrate potential applications of 3DTDS systems, which offer distinct efficiency and fabrication advantages over planar graphene in semiconductor and spintronics applications.[55][56]

Halides edit

The halides of bismuth in low oxidation states have been shown to adopt unusual structures. What was originally thought to be bismuth(I) chloride, BiCl, turns out to be a complex compound consisting of Bi5+
9
cations and BiCl2−
5
and Bi
2
Cl2−
8
anions.[48][57] The Bi5+
9
cation has a distorted tricapped trigonal prismatic molecular geometry and is also found in Bi
10
Hf
3
Cl
18
, which is prepared by reducing a mixture of hafnium(IV) chloride and bismuth chloride with elemental bismuth, having the structure [Bi+
] [Bi5+
9
] [HfCl2−
6
]
3
.[48]: 50  Other polyatomic bismuth cations are also known, such as Bi2+
8
, found in Bi
8
(AlCl
4
)
2
.[57] Bismuth also forms a low-valence bromide with the same structure as BiCl. There is a true monoiodide, BiI, which contains chains of Bi
4
I
4
units. BiI decomposes upon heating to the triiodide, BiI
3
, and elemental bismuth. A monobromide of the same structure also exists.[48] In oxidation state +3, bismuth forms trihalides with all of the halogens: BiF
3
, BiCl
3
, BiBr
3
, and BiI
3
. All of these except BiF
3
are hydrolyzed by water.[48]

Bismuth(III) chloride reacts with hydrogen chloride in ether solution to produce the acid HBiCl
4
.[33]

The oxidation state +5 is less frequently encountered. One such compound is BiF
5
, a powerful oxidizing and fluorinating agent. It is also a strong fluoride acceptor, reacting with xenon tetrafluoride to form the XeF+
3
cation:[33]

BiF
5
+ XeF
4
XeF+
3
BiF
6

Aqueous species edit

In aqueous solution, the Bi3+
ion is solvated to form the aqua ion Bi(H
2
O)3+
8
in strongly acidic conditions.[58] At pH > 0 polynuclear species exist, the most important of which is believed to be the octahedral complex [Bi
6
O
4
(OH)
4
]6+
.[59]

Occurrence and production edit

 
Bismite mineral
 
Chunk of a broken bismuth ingot

In the Earth's crust, bismuth is about twice as abundant as gold. The most important ores of bismuth are bismuthinite and bismite.[18] Native bismuth is known from Australia, Bolivia, and China.[60][61]

World bismuth production, 2022, in tonnes
Country Refining[62]
China 16,000
Laos 2,000
South Korea 950
Japan 480
Kazakhstan 220
Other 350
Total 20,000

According to the United States Geological Survey (USGS), 10,200 tonnes of bismuth were produced worldwide by mining and 17,100 tonnes by refining in 2016. Since then, USGS does not provide mining data for bismuth, considering them unreliable. Globally, bismuth is mostly produced by refining, as a byproduct of extraction of other metals such as lead, copper, tin, molybdenum and tungsten, though the refining-to-mining ratio depends on the country.[63][64][65][66]

Bismuth travels in crude lead bullion (which can contain up to 10% bismuth) through several stages of refining, until it is removed by the Kroll-Betterton process which separates the impurities as slag, or the electrolytic Betts process. Bismuth will behave similarly with another of its major metals, copper.[64] The raw bismuth metal from both processes contains still considerable amounts of other metals, foremost lead. By reacting the molten mixture with chlorine gas the metals are converted to their chlorides while bismuth remains unchanged. Impurities can also be removed by various other methods for example with fluxes and treatments yielding high-purity bismuth metal (over 99% Bi).[67]

Price edit

 
World mine production and annual averages of bismuth price (New York, not adjusted for inflation).[68]

The price for pure bismuth metal has been relatively stable through most of the 20th century, except for a spike in the 1970s. Bismuth has always been produced mainly as a byproduct of lead refining, and thus the price usually reflected the cost of recovery and the balance between production and demand.[68]

Prior to World War II, demand for bismuth was small and mainly pharmaceutical — bismuth compounds were used to treat such conditions as digestive disorders, sexually transmitted diseases and burns. Minor amounts of bismuth metal were consumed in fusible alloys for fire sprinkler systems and fuse wire. During World War II bismuth was considered a strategic material, used for solders, fusible alloys, medications and atomic research. To stabilize the market, the producers set the price at $1.25 per pound ($2.75 /kg) during the war and at $2.25 per pound ($4.96 /kg) from 1950 until 1964.[68]

In the early 1970s, the price rose rapidly as a result of increasing demand for bismuth as a metallurgical additive to aluminium, iron and steel. This was followed by a decline owing to increased world production, stabilized consumption, and the recessions of 1980 and 1981–1982. In 1984, the price began to climb as consumption increased worldwide, especially in the United States and Japan. In the early 1990s, research began on the evaluation of bismuth as a nontoxic replacement for lead in ceramic glazes, fishing sinkers, food-processing equipment, free-machining brasses for plumbing applications, lubricating greases, and shot for waterfowl hunting.[69] Growth in these areas remained slow during the middle 1990s, in spite of the backing of lead replacement by the United States federal government, but intensified around 2005. This resulted in a rapid and continuing increase in price.[68]

Recycling edit

Most bismuth is produced as a byproduct of other metal-extraction processes including the smelting of lead, and also of tungsten and copper. Its sustainability is dependent on increased recycling, which is problematic.[70]

It was once believed that bismuth could be practically recycled from the soldered joints in electronic equipment. Recent efficiencies in solder application in electronics mean there is substantially less solder deposited, and thus less to recycle. While recovering the silver from silver-bearing solder may remain economic, recovering bismuth is substantially less so.[71]

Dispersed bismuth is used in certain stomach medicines (bismuth subsalicylate), paints (bismuth vanadate), pearlescent cosmetics (bismuth oxychloride), and bismuth-containing bullets. Recycling bismuth from these uses is impractical.[67]

Applications edit

 
18th-century engraving of bismuth processing. During this era, bismuth was used to treat some digestive complaints.

Bismuth has few commercial applications, and those applications that use it generally require small quantities relative to other raw materials. In the United States, for example, 733 tonnes of bismuth were consumed in 2016, of which 70% went into chemicals (including pharmaceuticals, pigments, and cosmetics) and 11% into bismuth alloys.[67]

In the early 1990s, researchers began to evaluate bismuth as a nontoxic replacement for lead in various applications.[67]

Medicines edit

Bismuth is an ingredient in some pharmaceuticals,[8] although the use of some of these substances is declining.[52]

Cosmetics and pigments edit

Bismuth oxychloride (BiOCl) is sometimes used in cosmetics, as a pigment in paint for eye shadows, hair sprays and nail polishes.[8][52][83][84] This compound is found as the mineral bismoclite and in crystal form contains layers of atoms (see figure above) that refract light chromatically, resulting in an iridescent appearance similar to nacre of pearl. It was used as a cosmetic in ancient Egypt and in many places since. Bismuth white (also "Spanish white") can refer to either bismuth oxychloride or bismuth oxynitrate (BiONO3), when used as a white pigment.[85] Bismuth vanadate is used as a light-stable non-reactive paint pigment (particularly for artists' paints), often as a replacement for the more toxic cadmium sulfide yellow and orange-yellow pigments. The most common variety in artists' paints is a lemon yellow, visually indistinguishable from its cadmium-containing alternative.[86]

Metal and alloys edit

Bismuth is used in alloys with other metals such as tin and lead. Wood's metal, an alloy of bismuth, lead, tin, and cadmium is used in automatic sprinkler systems for fires. It forms the largest part (50%) of Rose's metal, a fusible alloy, which also contains 25–28% lead and 22–25% tin. It was also used to make bismuth bronze which was used in the Bronze Age, having been found in Inca knives at Machu Picchu.[87]

Lead replacement edit

The density difference between lead (11.32 g/cm3) and bismuth (9.78 g/cm3) is small enough that for many ballistics and weighting applications, bismuth can substitute for lead. For example, it can replace lead as a dense material in fishing sinkers. It has been used as a replacement for lead in shot, bullets and less-lethal riot gun ammunition. The Netherlands, Denmark, England, Wales, the United States, and many other countries now prohibit the use of lead shot for the hunting of wetland birds, as many birds are prone to lead poisoning owing to mistaken ingestion of lead (instead of small stones and grit) to aid digestion, or even prohibit the use of lead for all hunting, such as in the Netherlands. Bismuth-tin alloy shot is one alternative that provides similar ballistic performance to lead.[67]

Bismuth, as a dense element of high atomic weight, is used in bismuth-impregnated latex shields to shield from X-ray in medical examinations, such as CTs, mostly as it is considered non-toxic.[88]

The European Union's Restriction of Hazardous Substances Directive (RoHS) for reduction of lead has broadened bismuth's use in electronics as a component of low-melting point solders, as a replacement for traditional tin-lead solders.[67] Its low toxicity will be especially important for solders to be used in food processing equipment and copper water pipes, although it can also be used in other applications including those in the automobile industry, in the European Union, for example.[89]

Bismuth has been evaluated as a replacement for lead in free-machining brasses for plumbing applications,[90] although it does not equal the performance of leaded steels.[89]

Other metal uses and specialty alloys edit

Many bismuth alloys have low melting points and are found in specialty applications such as solders. Many automatic sprinklers, electric fuses, and safety devices in fire detection and suppression systems contain the eutectic In19.1-Cd5.3-Pb22.6-Sn8.3-Bi44.7 alloy that melts at 47 °C (117 °F)[18] This is a convenient temperature since it is unlikely to be exceeded in normal living conditions. Low-melting alloys, such as Bi-Cd-Pb-Sn alloy which melts at 70 °C, are also used in automotive and aviation industries. Before deforming a thin-walled metal part, it is filled with a melt or covered with a thin layer of the alloy to reduce the chance of breaking. Then the alloy is removed by submerging the part in boiling water.[91]

Bismuth is used to make free-machining steels and free-machining aluminium alloys for precision machining properties. It has similar effect to lead and improves the chip breaking during machining. The shrinking on solidification in lead and the expansion of bismuth compensate each other and therefore lead and bismuth are often used in similar quantities.[92][93] Similarly, alloys containing comparable parts of bismuth and lead exhibit a very small change (on the order 0.01%) upon melting, solidification or aging. Such alloys are used in high-precision casting, e.g. in dentistry, to create models and molds.[91] Bismuth is also used as an alloying agent in production of malleable irons[67] and as a thermocouple material.[18]

Bismuth is also used in aluminium-silicon cast alloys in order to refine silicon morphology. However, it indicated a poisoning effect on modification of strontium.[94][95] Some bismuth alloys, such as Bi35-Pb37-Sn25, are combined with non-sticking materials such as mica, glass and enamels because they easily wet them allowing to make joints to other parts. Addition of bismuth to caesium enhances the quantum yield of caesium cathodes.[52] Sintering of bismuth and manganese powders at 300 °C produces a permanent magnet and magnetostrictive material, which is used in ultrasonic generators and receivers working in the 10–100 kHz range and in magnetic and holographic memory devices.[96]

Other uses as compounds edit

 
Bismuth vanadate, a yellow pigment
  • Bismuth is included in BSCCO (bismuth strontium calcium copper oxide) which is a group of similar superconducting compounds discovered in 1988 that exhibit the highest superconducting transition temperatures.[97]
  • Bismuth telluride is a semiconductor and an excellent thermoelectric material.[52][98] Bi2Te3 diodes are used in mobile refrigerators, CPU coolers, and as detectors in infrared spectrophotometers.[52]
  • Bismuth oxide, in its delta form, is a solid electrolyte for oxygen. This form normally breaks down below a high-temperature threshold, but can be electrodeposited well below this temperature in a highly alkaline solution.[99]
  • Bismuth germanate is a scintillator, widely used in X-ray and gamma ray detectors.[100]
  • Bismuth vanadate is an opaque yellow pigment used by some artists' oil, acrylic, and watercolor paint companies, primarily as a replacement for the more toxic cadmium sulfide yellows in the greenish-yellow (lemon) to orange-toned yellow range. It performs practically identically to the cadmium pigments, such as in terms of resistance to degradation from UV exposure, opacity, tinting strength, and lack of reactivity when mixed with other pigments. The most commonly-used variety by artists' paint makers is lemon in color. In addition to being a replacement for several cadmium yellows, it also serves as a non-toxic visual replacement for the older chromate pigments made with zinc, lead, and strontium. If a green pigment and barium sulfate (for increased transparency) are added it can also serve as a replacement for barium chromate, which possesses a more greenish cast than the others. In comparison with lead chromate, it does not blacken due to hydrogen sulfide in the air (a process accelerated by UV exposure) and possesses a particularly brighter color than them, especially the lemon, which is the most translucent, dull, and fastest to blacken due to the higher percentage of lead sulfate required to produce that shade. It is also used, on a limited basis due to its cost, as a vehicle paint pigment.[101][102]
  • A catalyst for making acrylic fibers.[18]
  • As an electrocatalyst in the conversion of CO2 to CO.[103]
  • Ingredient in lubricating greases.[104]
  • In crackling microstars (dragon's eggs) in pyrotechnics, as the oxide, subcarbonate or subnitrate.[105][106]
  • As catalyst for the fluorination of arylboronic pinacol esters through a Bi(III)/Bi(V) catalytic cycle, mimicking transition metals in electrophilic fluorination.[107]

Toxicology and ecotoxicology edit

See also bismuthia, a rare dermatological condition that results from the prolonged use of bismuth.

Scientific literature indicates that some of the compounds of bismuth are less toxic to humans via ingestion than other heavy metals (lead, arsenic, antimony, etc.)[8] presumably due to the comparatively low solubility of bismuth salts.[108] Its biological half-life for whole-body retention is reported to be 5 days but it can remain in the kidney for years in people treated with bismuth compounds.[109]

Bismuth poisoning can occur and has according to some reports been common in relatively recent times.[108][110] As with lead, bismuth poisoning can result in the formation of a black deposit on the gingiva, known as a bismuth line.[111][112][113] Poisoning may be treated with dimercaprol; however, evidence for benefit is unclear.[114][115]

Bismuth's environmental impacts are not well known; it may be less likely to bioaccumulate than some other heavy metals, and this is an area of active research.[116][117]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Standard Atomic Weights: Bismuth". CIAAW. 2005.
  2. ^ Prohaska, Thomas; Irrgeher, Johanna; Benefield, Jacqueline; Böhlke, John K.; Chesson, Lesley A.; Coplen, Tyler B.; Ding, Tiping; Dunn, Philip J. H.; Gröning, Manfred; Holden, Norman E.; Meijer, Harro A. J. (4 May 2022). "Standard atomic weights of the elements 2021 (IUPAC Technical Report)". Pure and Applied Chemistry. doi:10.1515/pac-2019-0603. ISSN 1365-3075.
  3. ^ Bi(0) state exists in a N-heterocyclic carbene complex of dibismuthene; see Deka, Rajesh; Orthaber, Andreas (6 May 2022). "Carbene chemistry of arsenic, antimony, and bismuth: origin, evolution and future prospects". Royal Society of Chemistry. 51 (22): 8540–8556. doi:10.1039/d2dt00755j. PMID 35578901. S2CID 248675805.
  4. ^ a b Cucka, P.; Barrett, C. S. (1962). "The crystal structure of Bi and of solid solutions of Pb, Sn, Sb and Te in Bi". Acta Crystallographica. 15 (9): 865. doi:10.1107/S0365110X62002297.
  5. ^ Weast, Robert (1984). CRC, Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. Boca Raton, Florida: Chemical Rubber Company Publishing. pp. E110. ISBN 0-8493-0464-4.
  6. ^ Kondev, F. G.; Wang, M.; Huang, W. J.; Naimi, S.; Audi, G. (2021). "The NUBASE2020 evaluation of nuclear properties" (PDF). Chinese Physics C. 45 (3): 030001. doi:10.1088/1674-1137/abddae.
  7. ^ Dumé, Belle (23 April 2003). "Bismuth breaks half-life record for alpha decay". Physicsworld.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Kean, Sam (2011). The Disappearing Spoon (and other true tales of madness, love, and the history of the world from the Periodic Table of Elements). New York/Boston: Back Bay Books. pp. 158–160. ISBN 978-0-316-051637.
  9. ^ Harper, Douglas. "bismuth". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  10. ^ Bismuth 28 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology
  11. ^ Norman, Nicholas C. (1998). Chemistry of Arsenic, Antimony, and Bismuth. Springer. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-7514-0389-3.
  12. ^ Agricola, Georgious (1955) [1546]. . New York: Mineralogical Society of America. p. 178. Archived from the original on 14 May 2021. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  13. ^ Nicholson, William (1819). "Bismuth". American edition of the British encyclopedia: Or, Dictionary of Arts and sciences; comprising an accurate and popular view of the present improved state of human knowledge. p. 181.
  14. ^ a b Weeks, Mary Elvira (1932). "The discovery of the elements. II. Elements known to the alchemists". Journal of Chemical Education. 9 (1): 11. Bibcode:1932JChEd...9...11W. doi:10.1021/ed009p11.
  15. ^ Giunta, Carmen J. "Glossary of Archaic Chemical Terms". Le Moyne College. See also for other terms for bismuth, including stannum glaciale (glacial tin or ice-tin).
  16. ^ Gordon, Robert B.; Rutledge, John W. (1984). "Bismuth Bronze from Machu Picchu, Peru". Science. 223 (4636): 585–586. Bibcode:1984Sci...223..585G. doi:10.1126/science.223.4636.585. JSTOR 1692247. PMID 17749940. S2CID 206572055.
  17. ^ Pott, Johann Heinrich (1738). "De Wismutho". Exercitationes Chymicae. Berolini: Apud Johannem Andream Rüdigerum. p. 134.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Hammond, C. R. (2004). The Elements, in Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (81st ed.). Boca Raton (FL, US): CRC press. p. 4.1. ISBN 978-0-8493-0485-9.
  19. ^ Geoffroy, C.F. (1753). "Sur Bismuth". Histoire de l'Académie Royale des Sciences ... Avec les Mémoires de Mathématique & de Physique ... Tirez des Registres de Cette Académie: 190.
  20. ^ a b Levason, W.; Reid, G. (2003). "Coordination Chemistry of the s, p, and f Metals". Comprehensive Coordination Chemistry II. Amsterdam: Elsevier Pergamon. doi:10.1016/B0-08-043748-6/02023-5. ISBN 0-08-043748-6.
  21. ^ Krüger, p. 171.
  22. ^ Jones, H. (1936). "The Theory of the Galvomagnetic Effects in Bismuth". Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 155 (886): 653–663. Bibcode:1936RSPSA.155..653J. doi:10.1098/rspa.1936.0126. JSTOR 96773.
  23. ^ Hoffman, C.; Meyer, J.; Bartoli, F.; Di Venere, A.; Yi, X.; Hou, C.; Wang, H.; Ketterson, J.; Wong, G. (1993). "Semimetal-to-semiconductor transition in bismuth thin films". Phys. Rev. B. 48 (15): 11431–11434. Bibcode:1993PhRvB..4811431H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.48.11431. PMID 10007465.
  24. ^ a b Wiberg, p. 768.
  25. ^ Tracy, George R.; Tropp, Harry E.; Friedl, Alfred E. (1974). Modern physical science. Holt, Rinehart and Winston. p. 268. ISBN 978-0-03-007381-6.
  26. ^ Tribe, Alfred (1868). "IX.—Freezing of water and bismuth". Journal of the Chemical Society. 21: 71. doi:10.1039/JS8682100071.
  27. ^ Papon, Pierre; Leblond, Jacques; Meijer, Paul Herman Ernst (2006). The Physics of Phase Transitions. Springer. p. 82. ISBN 978-3-540-33390-6.
  28. ^ Tiller, William A. (1991). The science of crystallization: microscopic interfacial phenomena. Cambridge University Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-521-38827-6.
  29. ^ Wiberg, p. 767.
  30. ^ Krüger, p. 172.
  31. ^ Boldyreva, Elena (2010). High-Pressure Crystallography: From Fundamental Phenomena to Technological Applications. Springer. pp. 264–265. ISBN 978-90-481-9257-1.
  32. ^ Manghnani, Murli H. (25–30 July 1999). Science and Technology of High Pressure: Proceedings of the International Conference on High Pressure Science and Technology (AIRAPT-17). Vol. 2. Honolulu, Hawaii: Universities Press (India) (published 2000). p. 1086. ISBN 978-81-7371-339-2.
  33. ^ a b c d e Suzuki, p. 8.
  34. ^ Wiberg, pp. 769–770.
  35. ^ a b Greenwood, pp. 559–561.
  36. ^ a b Krüger, p. 185
  37. ^ Suzuki, p. 9.
  38. ^ Krabbe, S.W.; Mohan, R.S. (2012). "Environmentally friendly organic synthesis using Bi(III) compounds". In Ollevier, Thierry (ed.). Topics in Current chemistry 311, Bismuth-Mediated Organic Reactions. Springer. pp. 100–110. ISBN 978-3-642-27239-4.
  39. ^ Rich, Ronald (2007). Inorganic Reactions in Water (e-book). Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-73962-3.
  40. ^ Carvalho, H. G.; Penna, M. (1972). "Alpha-activity of 209
    Bi
    ". Lettere al Nuovo Cimento. 3 (18): 720. doi:10.1007/BF02824346. S2CID 120952231.
  41. ^ Marcillac, Pierre de; Noël Coron; Gérard Dambier; Jacques Leblanc & Jean-Pierre Moalic (2003). "Experimental detection of α-particles from the radioactive decay of natural bismuth". Nature. 422 (6934): 876–878. Bibcode:2003Natur.422..876D. doi:10.1038/nature01541. PMID 12712201. S2CID 4415582.
  42. ^ a b Audi, G.; Kondev, F. G.; Wang, M.; Huang, W. J.; Naimi, S. (2017). "The NUBASE2016 evaluation of nuclear properties" (PDF). Chinese Physics C. 41 (3): 030001. Bibcode:2017ChPhC..41c0001A. doi:10.1088/1674-1137/41/3/030001.
  43. ^ Loveland, Walter D.; Morrissey, David J.; Seaborg, Glenn T. (2006). Modern Nuclear Chemistry. John Wiley & Sons. p. 78. Bibcode:2005mnc..book.....L. ISBN 978-0-471-11532-8.
  44. ^ Peppard, D. F.; Mason, G. W.; Gray, P. R.; Mech, J. F. (1952). "Occurrence of the (4n + 1) series in nature" (PDF). Journal of the American Chemical Society. 74 (23): 6081–6084. doi:10.1021/ja01143a074.
  45. ^ Imam, S. (2001). "Advancements in cancer therapy with alpha-emitters: a review". International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics. 51 (1): 271–8. doi:10.1016/S0360-3016(01)01585-1. PMID 11516878.
  46. ^ Acton, Ashton (2011). Issues in Cancer Epidemiology and Research. ScholarlyEditions. p. 520. ISBN 978-1-4649-6352-0.
  47. ^ Greenwood, p. 553.
  48. ^ a b c d e f Godfrey, S. M.; McAuliffe, C. A.; Mackie, A. G.; Pritchard, R. G. (1998). Nicholas C. Norman (ed.). Chemistry of arsenic, antimony, and bismuth. Springer. pp. 67–84. ISBN 978-0-7514-0389-3.
  49. ^ Scott, Thomas; Eagleson, Mary (1994). Concise encyclopedia chemistry. Walter de Gruyter. p. 136. ISBN 978-3-11-011451-5.
  50. ^ Greenwood, p. 578.
  51. ^ An Introduction to the Study of Chemistry. Forgotten Books. p. 363. ISBN 978-1-4400-5235-4.
  52. ^ a b c d e f Krüger, p. 184.
  53. ^ "bismuthide". Your Dictionary. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  54. ^ Okamoto, H. (1 March 2002). "Bi-Nd (Bismuth-Neodymium)". Journal of Phase Equilibria. 23 (2): 191. doi:10.1361/1054971023604224.
  55. ^ "3D counterpart to graphene discovered [UPDATE]". KurzweilAI. 20 January 2014. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  56. ^ Liu, Z. K.; Zhou, B.; Zhang, Y.; Wang, Z. J.; Weng, H. M.; Prabhakaran, D.; Mo, S. K.; Shen, Z. X.; Fang, Z.; Dai, X.; Hussain, Z.; Chen, Y. L. (2014). "Discovery of a Three-Dimensional Topological Dirac Semimetal, Na3Bi". Science. 343 (6173): 864–7. arXiv:1310.0391. Bibcode:2014Sci...343..864L. doi:10.1126/science.1245085. PMID 24436183. S2CID 206552029.
  57. ^ a b Gillespie, R. J.; Passmore, J. (1975). Emeléus, H. J.; Sharp A. G. (eds.). Advances in Inorganic Chemistry and Radiochemistry. Academic Press. pp. 77–78. ISBN 978-0-12-023617-6.
  58. ^ Persson, Ingmar (2010). "Hydrated metal ions in aqueous solution: How regular are their structures?". Pure and Applied Chemistry. 82 (10): 1901–1917. doi:10.1351/PAC-CON-09-10-22.
  59. ^ Näslund, Jan; Persson, Ingmar; Sandström, Magnus (2000). "Solvation of the Bismuth(III) Ion by Water, Dimethyl Sulfoxide, N,N'-Dimethylpropyleneurea, and N,N-Dimethylthioformamide. An EXAFS, Large-Angle X-ray Scattering, and Crystallographic Structural Study". Inorganic Chemistry. 39 (18): 4012–4021. doi:10.1021/ic000022m. PMID 11198855.
  60. ^ Anthony, John W.; Bideaux, Richard A.; Bladh, Kenneth W.; Nichols, Monte C. (eds.). "Bismuth" (PDF). Handbook of Mineralogy: Elements, Sulfides, Sulfosalts. Chantilly, VA, US: Mineralogical Society of America. ISBN 978-0-9622097-0-3. Retrieved 5 December 2011.
  61. ^ Krüger, pp. 172–173.
  62. ^ Merrill, Adam M. "2023 USGS Minerals Yearbook: Bismuth" (PDF). United States Geological Survey.
  63. ^ Krüger, p. 173.
  64. ^ a b Ojebuoboh, Funsho K. (1992). "Bismuth—Production, properties, and applications". JOM. 44 (4): 46–49. Bibcode:1992JOM....44d..46O. doi:10.1007/BF03222821. S2CID 52993615.
  65. ^ Horsley, G. W. (1957). "The preparation of bismuth for use in a liquid-metal fuelled reactor". Journal of Nuclear Energy. 6 (1–2): 41. doi:10.1016/0891-3919(57)90180-8.
  66. ^ Shevtsov, Yu. V.; Beizel’, N. F. (2011). "Pb distribution in multistep bismuth refining products". Inorganic Materials. 47 (2): 139. doi:10.1134/S0020168511020166. S2CID 96931735.
  67. ^ a b c d e f g Singerling, Sheryl A.; Callaghan, Robert M. "2018 USGS Minerals Yearbook: Bismuth" (PDF). United States Geological Survey.
  68. ^ a b c d Bismuth Statistics and Information. see "Metal Prices in the United States through 1998" for a price summary and "Historical Statistics for Mineral and Material Commodities in the United States" for production. USGS.
  69. ^ Suzuki, p. 14.
  70. ^ European Commission. Directorate General for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs. (2018). Report on critical raw materials and the circular economy. European Commission. Directorate General for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs. doi:10.2873/167813. ISBN 9789279946264.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  71. ^ Warburg, N. (PDF). University of Stuttgart. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 February 2009. Retrieved 5 May 2009.
  72. ^ CDC, shigellosis.
  73. ^ Sox TE; Olson CA (1989). "Binding and killing of bacteria by bismuth subsalicylate". Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 33 (12): 2075–82. doi:10.1128/AAC.33.12.2075. PMC 172824. PMID 2694949.
  74. ^ "P/74/2009: European Medicines Agency decision of 20 April 2009 on the granting of a product specific waiver for Bismuth subcitrate potassium / Metronidazole / Tetracycline hydrochloride (EMEA-000382-PIP01-08) in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 1901/2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council as amended" (PDF). European Medicines Agency. 10 June 2009.
  75. ^ Urgesi R, Cianci R, Riccioni ME (2012). "Update on triple therapy for eradication of Helicobacter pylori: current status of the art". Clinical and Experimental Gastroenterology. 5: 151–7. doi:10.2147/CEG.S25416. PMC 3449761. PMID 23028235.
  76. ^ Gurtler L (January 2002). "Chapter 2: The Eye and Conjunctiva as Target of Entry for Infectious Agents: Prevention by Protection and by Antiseptic Prophylaxis". In Kramer A, Behrens-Baumann W (eds.). Antiseptic prophylaxis and therapy in ocular infections: principles, clinical practice, and infection control. Developments in Ophthalmology. Vol. 33. Basel: Karger. pp. 9–13. doi:10.1159/000065934. ISBN 978-3-8055-7316-0. PMID 12236131.
  77. ^ Gorbach SL (September 1990). "Bismuth therapy in gastrointestinal diseases". Gastroenterology. 99 (3): 863–75. doi:10.1016/0016-5085(90)90983-8. PMID 2199292.
  78. ^ Sparberg M (March 1974). "Correspondence: Bismuth subgallate as an effective means for the control of ileostomy odor: a double blind study". Gastroenterology. 66 (3): 476. doi:10.1016/S0016-5085(74)80150-2. PMID 4813513.
  79. ^ Parnell, R. J. G. (1924). "Bismuth in the Treatment of Syphilis". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 17 (War section): 19–26. doi:10.1177/003591572401702604. PMC 2201253. PMID 19984212.
  80. ^ Giemsa, Gustav (1924) U.S. patent 1,540,117 "Manufacture of bismuth tartrates"
  81. ^ Frith, John (November 2012). "Syphilis – Its Early History and Treatment Until Penicillin, and the Debate on its Origins". Journal of Military and Veterans' Health. 20 (4): 54. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  82. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 June 2013. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
  83. ^ Maile, Frank J.; Pfaff, Gerhard; Reynders, Peter (2005). "Effect pigments—past, present and future". Progress in Organic Coatings. 54 (3): 150. doi:10.1016/j.porgcoat.2005.07.003.
  84. ^ Pfaff, Gerhard (2008). Special effect pigments: Technical basics and applications. Vincentz Network GmbH. p. 36. ISBN 978-3-86630-905-0.
  85. ^ Sadler, Peter J (1991). "Chapter 1". In Sykes, A.G. (ed.). ADVANCES IN INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Volume 36. Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-023636-2.
  86. ^ Weldon, Dwight G. (2009). Failure analysis of paints and coatings. Chichester, U.K.: Wiley. p. 40. ISBN 978-1-61583-267-5. OCLC 608477934.
  87. ^ Gordon, Robert B.; Rutledge, John W. (1984). "Bismuth Bronze from Machu Picchu, Peru". Science. American Association for the Advancement of Science. 223 (4636): 585–586. Bibcode:1984Sci...223..585G. doi:10.1126/science.223.4636.585. JSTOR 1692247. PMID 17749940. S2CID 206572055.
  88. ^ Hopper KD; King SH; Lobell ME; TenHave TR; Weaver JS (1997). "The breast: inplane x-ray protection during diagnostic thoracic CT—shielding with bismuth radioprotective garments". Radiology. 205 (3): 853–8. doi:10.1148/radiology.205.3.9393547. PMID 9393547.
  89. ^ a b Lohse, Joachim; Zangl, Stéphanie; Groß, Rita; Gensch, Carl-Otto; Deubzer, Otmar (September 2007). "Adaptation to Scientific and Technical Progress of Annex II Directive 2000/53/EC" (PDF). European Commission. Retrieved 11 September 2009.
  90. ^ La Fontaine, A.; Keast, V. J. (2006). "Compositional distributions in classical and lead-free brasses". Materials Characterization. 57 (4–5): 424. doi:10.1016/j.matchar.2006.02.005.
  91. ^ a b Krüger, p. 183.
  92. ^ Llewellyn, D. T.; Hudd, Roger C. (1998). Steels: Metallurgy and applications. Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 239. ISBN 978-0-7506-3757-2.
  93. ^ Davis, J. R. (1993). Aluminum and Aluminum Alloys. ASM International. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-87170-496-2.
  94. ^ Farahany, Saeed; A. Ourdjini; M.H. Idris; L.T. Thai (2011). "Poisoning effect of bismuth on modification behavior of strontium in LM25 alloy". Journal of Bulletin of Materials Science. 34 (6): 1223–1231. doi:10.1007/s12034-011-0239-5.
  95. ^ Farahany, Saeed; A. Ourdjini; M. H. Idris; L.T. Thai (2011). "Effect of bismuth on the microstructure of unmodified and Sr-modified Al-7%Si-0.4Mg alloy". Journal of Transactions of Nonferrous Metals Society of China. 21 (7): 1455–1464. doi:10.1016/S1003-6326(11)60881-9. S2CID 73719425.
  96. ^ Suzuki, p. 15.
  97. ^ . National High Magnetic Field Laboratory. Archived from the original on 12 April 2013. Retrieved 18 January 2010.
  98. ^ Tritt, Terry M. (2000). Recent trends in thermoelectric materials research. Academic Press. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-12-752178-7.
  99. ^ Maric, Radenka; Mirshekari, Gholamreza (2020). Solid oxide fuel cells : from fundamental principles to complete systems. Boca Raton. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-429-52784-5. OCLC 1228350036.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  100. ^ Saha, Gopal B. (2006). Physics and radiobiology of nuclear medicine. New York: Springer. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-387-36281-6. OCLC 655784658.
  101. ^ Tücks, Andreas; Beck, Horst P. (2007). "The photochromic effect of bismuth vanadate pigments: Investigations on the photochromic mechanism". Dyes and Pigments. 72 (2): 163. doi:10.1016/j.dyepig.2005.08.027.
  102. ^ Müller, Albrecht (2003). "Yellow pigments". Coloring of plastics: Fundamentals, colorants, preparations. Hanser Verlag. pp. 91–93. ISBN 978-1-56990-352-0.
  103. ^ DiMeglio, John L.; Rosenthal, Joel (2013). "Selective conversion of CO2 to CO with high efficiency using an bismuth-based electrocatalyst". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 135 (24): 8798–8801. doi:10.1021/ja4033549. PMC 3725765. PMID 23735115.
  104. ^ Mortier, Roy M.; Fox, Malcolm F.; Orszulik, Stefan T. (2010). Chemistry and Technology of Lubricants. Springer. p. 430. Bibcode:2010ctl..book.....M. ISBN 978-1-4020-8661-8.
  105. ^ Croteau, Gerry; Dills, Russell; Beaudreau, Marc; Davis, Mac (2010). "Emission factors and exposures from ground-level pyrotechnics". Atmospheric Environment. 44 (27): 3295. Bibcode:2010AtmEn..44.3295C. doi:10.1016/j.atmosenv.2010.05.048.
  106. ^ Ledgard, Jared (2006). The Preparatory Manual of Black Powder and Pyrotechnics. Lulu. pp. 207, 319, 370, 518, search. ISBN 978-1-4116-8574-1.
  107. ^ Planas, Oriol; Wang, Feng; Leutzsch, Markus; Cornella, Josep (2020). "Fluorination of arylboronic esters enabled by bismuth redox catalysis". Science. 367 (6475): 313–317. Bibcode:2020Sci...367..313P. doi:10.1126/science.aaz2258. hdl:21.11116/0000-0005-DB57-3. PMID 31949081. S2CID 210698047.
  108. ^ a b DiPalma, Joseph R. (2001). "Bismuth Toxicity, Often Mild, Can Result in Severe Poisonings". Emergency Medicine News. 23 (3): 16. doi:10.1097/00132981-200104000-00012.
  109. ^ Fowler, B.A. & Sexton M.J. (2007). "Bismuth". In Nordberg, Gunnar (ed.). Handbook on the toxicology of metals. Academic Press. pp. 433 ff. ISBN 978-0-12-369413-3.
  110. ^ Data on Bismuth's health and environmental effects. Lenntech.com. Retrieved on 17 December 2011.
  111. ^ "Bismuth line" in TheFreeDictionary's Medical dictionary. Farlex, Inc.
  112. ^ Levantine, Ashley; Almeyda, John (1973). "Drug induced changes in pigmentation". British Journal of Dermatology. 89 (1): 105–12. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2133.1973.tb01932.x. PMID 4132858. S2CID 7175799.
  113. ^ Krüger, pp. 187–188.
  114. ^ World Health Organization (2009). Stuart MC, Kouimtzi M, Hill SR (eds.). WHO Model Formulary 2008. World Health Organization. p. 62. hdl:10665/44053. ISBN 9789241547659.
  115. ^ "Dimercaprol". The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  116. ^ Boriova; et al. (2015). "Bismuth(III) Volatilization and Immobilization by Filamentous Fungus Aspergillus clavatus During Aerobic Incubation". Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology. 68 (2): 405–411. Bibcode:2015ArECT..68..405B. doi:10.1007/s00244-014-0096-5. PMID 25367214. S2CID 30197424.
  117. ^ Boriova; et al. (2013). "Bioaccumulation and biosorption of bismuth Bi (III) by filamentous fungus Aspergillus clavatus" (PDF). Student Scientific Conference PriF UK 2013. Proceedings of Reviewed Contributions.

Bibliography edit

  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Brown, R. D., Jr. "Annual Average Bismuth Price", USGS (1998)

  • Greenwood, N. N. & Earnshaw, A. (1997). Chemistry of the Elements (2nd ed.). Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-7506-3365-9.
  • Krüger, Joachim; Winkler, Peter; Lüderitz, Eberhard; Lück, Manfred; Wolf, Hans Uwe (2003). "Bismuth, Bismuth Alloys, and Bismuth Compounds". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. pp. 171–189. doi:10.1002/14356007.a04_171. ISBN 978-3527306732.
  • Suzuki, Hitomi (2001). Organobismuth Chemistry. Elsevier. pp. 1–20. ISBN 978-0-444-20528-5.
  • Wiberg, Egon; Holleman, A. F.; Wiberg, Nils (2001). Inorganic chemistry. Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-352651-9.

External links edit

  • Laboratory growth of large crystals of Bismuth by Jan Kihle Crystal Pulling Laboratories, Norway
  • Bismuth at The Periodic Table of Videos (University of Nottingham)
  • Bismuth breaks half-life record for alpha decay
  • Bismuth Crystals – Instructions & Pictures

bismuth, this, article, about, chemical, element, other, uses, disambiguation, chemical, element, symbol, atomic, number, post, transition, metal, pnictogens, with, chemical, properties, resembling, lighter, group, siblings, arsenic, antimony, elemental, bismu. This article is about the chemical element For other uses see Bismuth disambiguation Bismuth is a chemical element it has symbol Bi and atomic number 83 It is a post transition metal and one of the pnictogens with chemical properties resembling its lighter group 15 siblings arsenic and antimony Elemental bismuth occurs naturally and its sulfide and oxide forms are important commercial ores The free element is 86 as dense as lead It is a brittle metal with a silvery white color when freshly produced Surface oxidation generally gives samples of the metal a somewhat rosy cast Further oxidation under heat can give bismuth a vividly iridescent appearance due to thin film interference Bismuth is both the most diamagnetic element and one of the least thermally conductive metals known Bismuth 83BiBismuthPronunciation ˈ b ɪ z m e 8 wbr BIZ meth Appearancelustrous brownish silverStandard atomic weight Ar Bi 208 98040 0 00001 1 208 98 0 01 abridged 2 Bismuth in the periodic tableHydrogen HeliumLithium Beryllium Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine NeonSodium Magnesium Aluminium Silicon Phosphorus Sulfur Chlorine ArgonPotassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine KryptonRubidium Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenium Rhodium Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine XenonCaesium Barium Lanthanum Cerium Praseodymium Neodymium Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury element Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium Astatine RadonFrancium Radium Actinium Thorium Protactinium Uranium Neptunium Plutonium Americium Curium Berkelium Californium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Nobelium Lawrencium Rutherfordium Dubnium Seaborgium Bohrium Hassium Meitnerium Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium Nihonium Flerovium Moscovium Livermorium Tennessine Oganesson Sb Bi Mclead bismuth poloniumAtomic number Z 83Groupgroup 15 pnictogens Periodperiod 6Block p blockElectron configuration Xe 4f14 5d10 6s2 6p3Electrons per shell2 8 18 32 18 5Physical propertiesPhase at STPsolidMelting point544 7 K 271 5 C 520 7 F Boiling point1837 K 1564 C 2847 F Density near r t 9 78 g cm3when liquid at m p 10 05 g cm3Heat of fusion11 30 kJ molHeat of vaporization179 kJ molMolar heat capacity25 52 J mol K Vapor pressureP Pa 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 kat T K 941 1041 1165 1325 1538 1835Atomic propertiesOxidation states 3 2 1 0 3 1 2 3 4 5 a mildly acidic oxide ElectronegativityPauling scale 2 02Ionization energies1st 703 kJ mol2nd 1610 kJ mol3rd 2466 kJ mol more Atomic radiusempirical 156 pmCovalent radius148 4 pmVan der Waals radius207 pmSpectral lines of bismuthOther propertiesNatural occurrenceprimordialCrystal structure rhombohedral 4 Thermal expansion13 4 µm m K at 25 C Thermal conductivity7 97 W m K Electrical resistivity1 29 µW m at 20 C Magnetic orderingdiamagneticMolar magnetic susceptibility 280 1 10 6 cm3 mol 5 Young s modulus32 GPaShear modulus12 GPaBulk modulus31 GPaSpeed of sound thin rod1790 m s at 20 C Poisson ratio0 33Mohs hardness2 25Brinell hardness70 95 MPaCAS Number7440 69 9HistoryDiscoveryArabic alchemists before AD 1000 Isotopes of bismuthveMain isotopes 6 Decayabun dance half life t1 2 mode pro duct207Bi synth 31 55 y b 207Pb208Bi synth 3 68 105 y b 208Pb209Bi 100 2 01 1019 y a 205Tl210Bi trace 5 012 d b 210Poa 206Tl210mBi synth 3 04 106 y IT 210Bia 206Tl Category Bismuthviewtalkedit referencesBismuth was long considered the element with the highest atomic mass whose nuclei do not spontaneously decay However in 2003 it was discovered to be extremely weakly radioactive The metal s only primordial isotope bismuth 209 undergoes alpha decay with a half life about a billion times the estimated age of the universe 7 8 Bismuth metal has been known since ancient times Before modern analytical methods bismuth s metallurgical similarities to lead and tin often led it to be confused with those metals The etymology of bismuth is uncertain The name may come from mid sixteenth century Neo Latin translations of the German words weisse Masse or Wismuth meaning white mass which were rendered as bisemutum or bisemutium Contents 1 Main uses 2 History and etymology 3 Characteristics 3 1 Physical characteristics 3 2 Chemical characteristics 3 3 Isotopes 4 Chemical compounds 4 1 Oxides and sulfides 4 2 Bismuthine and bismuthides 4 3 Halides 4 4 Aqueous species 5 Occurrence and production 5 1 Price 5 2 Recycling 6 Applications 6 1 Medicines 6 2 Cosmetics and pigments 6 3 Metal and alloys 6 3 1 Lead replacement 6 3 2 Other metal uses and specialty alloys 6 4 Other uses as compounds 7 Toxicology and ecotoxicology 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksMain uses editBismuth compounds account for about half the global production of bismuth They are used in cosmetics pigments and a few pharmaceuticals notably bismuth subsalicylate used to treat diarrhea 8 Bismuth s unusual propensity to expand as it solidifies is responsible for some of its uses as in the casting of printing type 8 Bismuth when in its elemental form has unusually low toxicity for a heavy metal 8 As the toxicity of lead and the cost of its environmental remediation became more apparent during the 20th century suitable bismuth alloys have gained popularity as replacements for lead Presently around a third of global bismuth production is dedicated to needs formerly met by lead History and etymology editBismuth metal has been known since ancient times and it was one of the first 10 metals to have been discovered The name bismuth dates to around 1665 and is of uncertain etymology The name possibly comes from obsolete German Bismuth Wismut Wissmuth early 16th century perhaps related to Old High German hwiz white 9 The Neo Latin bisemutium coined by Georgius Agricola who Latinized many German mining and technical words is from the German Wismuth itself perhaps from weisse Masse meaning white mass 10 11 The element was confused in early times with tin and lead because of its resemblance to those elements Because bismuth has been known since ancient times no one person is credited with its discovery Agricola 1546 states that bismuth is a distinct metal in a family of metals including tin and lead This was based on observation of the metals and their physical properties 12 Miners in the age of alchemy also gave bismuth the name tectum argenti or silver being made in the sense of silver still in the process of being formed within the Earth 13 14 15 Bismuth was also known to the Incas and used along with the usual copper and tin in a special bronze alloy for knives 16 nbsp Alchemical symbol used by Torbern Bergman 1775 Beginning with Johann Heinrich Pott in 1738 17 Carl Wilhelm Scheele and Torbern Olof Bergman the distinctness of lead and bismuth became clear and Claude Francois Geoffroy demonstrated in 1753 that this metal is distinct from lead and tin 14 18 19 Characteristics edit nbsp Left A bismuth hopper crystal exhibiting the stairstep crystal structure and iridescent colors which are produced by interference of light within the oxide film on its surface Right a 1 cm3 cube of unoxidised bismuth metalPhysical characteristics edit nbsp Pressure temperature phase diagram of bismuth TC refers to the superconducting transition temperatureBismuth is a brittle metal with a dark silver pink hue often with an iridescent oxide tarnish showing many colors from yellow to blue The spiral stair stepped structure of bismuth crystals is the result of a higher growth rate around the outside edges than on the inside edges The variations in the thickness of the oxide layer that forms on the surface of the crystal cause different wavelengths of light to interfere upon reflection thus displaying a rainbow of colors When burned in oxygen bismuth burns with a blue flame and its oxide forms yellow fumes 18 Its toxicity is much lower than that of its neighbors in the periodic table such as lead and antimony 20 No other metal is verified to be more naturally diamagnetic than bismuth 18 21 Superdiamagnetism is a different physical phenomenon Of any metal it has one of the lowest values of thermal conductivity after manganese neptunium and plutonium and the highest Hall coefficient 22 It has a high electrical resistivity 18 When deposited in sufficiently thin layers on a substrate bismuth is a semiconductor despite being a post transition metal 23 Elemental bismuth is denser in the liquid phase than the solid a characteristic it shares with germanium silicon gallium and water 24 Bismuth expands 3 32 on solidification therefore it was long a component of low melting typesetting alloys where it compensated for the contraction of the other alloying components 18 25 26 27 to form almost isostatic bismuth lead eutectic alloys Though virtually unseen in nature high purity bismuth can form distinctive colorful hopper crystals It is relatively nontoxic and has a low melting point just above 271 C so crystals may be grown using a household stove although the resulting crystals will tend to be of lower quality than lab grown crystals 28 At ambient conditions bismuth shares the same layered structure as the metallic forms of arsenic and antimony 29 crystallizing in the rhombohedral lattice 30 Pearson symbol hR6 space group R3 m No 166 of the trigonal crystal system 4 When compressed at room temperature this Bi I structure changes first to the monoclinic Bi II at 2 55 GPa then to the tetragonal Bi III at 2 7 GPa and finally to the body centered cubic Bi V at 7 7 GPa The corresponding transitions can be monitored via changes in electrical conductivity they are rather reproducible and abrupt and are therefore used for calibration of high pressure equipment 31 32 Chemical characteristics edit Bismuth is stable to both dry and moist air at ordinary temperatures When red hot it reacts with water to make bismuth III oxide 33 2 Bi 3 H2O Bi2O3 3 H2It reacts with fluorine to make bismuth V fluoride at 500 C or bismuth III fluoride at lower temperatures typically from Bi melts with other halogens it yields only bismuth III halides 34 35 36 The trihalides are corrosive and easily react with moisture forming oxyhalides with the formula BiOX 37 4 Bi 6 X2 4 BiX3 X F Cl Br I 4 BiX3 2 O2 4 BiOX 4 X2Bismuth dissolves in concentrated sulfuric acid to make bismuth III sulfate and sulfur dioxide 33 6 H2SO4 2 Bi 6 H2O Bi2 SO4 3 3 SO2It reacts with nitric acid to make bismuth III nitrate which decomposes into nitrogen dioxide when heated 38 39 Bi 6 HNO3 3 H2O 3 NO2 Bi NO3 3It also dissolves in hydrochloric acid but only with oxygen present 33 4 Bi 3 O2 12 HCl 4 BiCl3 6 H2OIsotopes edit Main article Isotopes of bismuth The only primordial isotope of bismuth bismuth 209 was traditionally regarded as the heaviest stable isotope but it had long been suspected 40 to be unstable on theoretical grounds This was finally demonstrated in 2003 when researchers at the Institut d Astrophysique Spatiale in Orsay France measured the alpha emission half life of 209 Bi to be 2 01 1019 years 3 Bq Mg 41 42 over a billion times longer than the current estimated age of the universe 8 Owing to its extraordinarily long half life for all presently known medical and industrial applications bismuth can be treated as if it is stable and nonradioactive The radioactivity is of academic interest because bismuth is one of a few elements whose radioactivity was suspected and theoretically predicted before being detected in the laboratory 8 Bismuth has the longest known alpha decay half life although tellurium 128 has a double beta decay half life of over 2 2 1024 years 42 Bismuth s extremely long half life means that less than approximately one billionth of the bismuth present at the formation of the planet Earth would have decayed into thallium since then Six isotopes of bismuth with short half lives 210 through 215 inclusive occur within the natural radioactive disintegration chains of actinium radium thorium and neptunium and more have been synthesized experimentally Although all primordial 237Np has long since decayed it is continually regenerated by n 2n knockout reactions on natural 238U 43 44 Commercially the radioactive isotope bismuth 213 can be produced by bombarding radium with bremsstrahlung photons from a linear particle accelerator In 1997 an antibody conjugate with bismuth 213 which has a 45 minute half life and decays with the emission of an alpha particle was used to treat patients with leukemia This isotope has also been tried in cancer treatment for example in the targeted alpha therapy TAT program 45 46 Chemical compounds editSee also Category Bismuth compounds nbsp Bismuth III oxide powderBismuth forms trivalent and pentavalent compounds the trivalent ones being more common Many of its chemical properties are similar to those of arsenic and antimony although they are less toxic than derivatives of those lighter elements 20 Oxides and sulfides edit At elevated temperatures the vapors of the metal combine rapidly with oxygen forming the yellow trioxide Bi2 O3 24 47 When molten at temperatures above 710 C this oxide corrodes any metal oxide and even platinum 36 On reaction with a base it forms two series of oxyanions BiO 2 which is polymeric and forms linear chains and BiO3 3 The anion in Li3 BiO3 is a cubic octameric anion Bi8 O24 24 whereas the anion in Na3 BiO3 is tetrameric 48 The dark red bismuth pentoxide Bi2 O5 is unstable liberating O2 gas upon heating 49 The compound NaBiO3 is a strong oxidising agent 50 Bismuth sulfide Bi2 S3 occurs naturally in bismuth ores 51 It is also produced by the combination of molten bismuth and sulfur 35 nbsp Bismuth oxychloride BiOCl structure mineral bismoclite Bismuth atoms are shown as grey oxygen red chlorine green Bismuth oxychloride BiOCl see figure at right and bismuth oxynitrate BiONO3 stoichiometrically appear as simple anionic salts of the bismuthyl III cation BiO which commonly occurs in aqueous bismuth compounds However in the case of BiOCl the salt crystal forms in a structure of alternating plates of Bi O and Cl atoms with each oxygen coordinating with four bismuth atoms in the adjacent plane This mineral compound is used as a pigment and cosmetic see below 52 Bismuthine and bismuthides edit Unlike the lighter pnictogens nitrogen phosphorus and arsenic but similar to antimony bismuth does not form a stable hydride Bismuth hydride bismuthine BiH3 is an endothermic compound that spontaneously decomposes at room temperature It is stable only below 60 C 48 Bismuthides are intermetallic compounds between bismuth and other metals 53 such as neodymium 54 In 2014 researchers discovered that sodium bismuthide can exist as a form of matter called a three dimensional topological Dirac semi metal 3DTDS that possess 3D Dirac fermions in bulk It is a natural three dimensional counterpart to graphene with similar electron mobility and velocity Graphene and topological insulators such as those in 3DTDS are both crystalline materials that are electrically insulating inside but conducting on the surface allowing them to function as transistors and other electronic devices While sodium bismuthide Na3 Bi is too unstable to be used in devices without packaging it can demonstrate potential applications of 3DTDS systems which offer distinct efficiency and fabrication advantages over planar graphene in semiconductor and spintronics applications 55 56 Halides edit The halides of bismuth in low oxidation states have been shown to adopt unusual structures What was originally thought to be bismuth I chloride BiCl turns out to be a complex compound consisting of Bi5 9 cations and BiCl2 5 and Bi2 Cl2 8 anions 48 57 The Bi5 9 cation has a distorted tricapped trigonal prismatic molecular geometry and is also found in Bi10 Hf3 Cl18 which is prepared by reducing a mixture of hafnium IV chloride and bismuth chloride with elemental bismuth having the structure Bi Bi5 9 HfCl2 6 3 48 50 Other polyatomic bismuth cations are also known such as Bi2 8 found in Bi8 AlCl4 2 57 Bismuth also forms a low valence bromide with the same structure as BiCl There is a true monoiodide BiI which contains chains of Bi4 I4 units BiI decomposes upon heating to the triiodide BiI3 and elemental bismuth A monobromide of the same structure also exists 48 In oxidation state 3 bismuth forms trihalides with all of the halogens BiF3 BiCl3 BiBr3 and BiI3 All of these except BiF3 are hydrolyzed by water 48 Bismuth III chloride reacts with hydrogen chloride in ether solution to produce the acid HBiCl4 33 The oxidation state 5 is less frequently encountered One such compound is BiF5 a powerful oxidizing and fluorinating agent It is also a strong fluoride acceptor reacting with xenon tetrafluoride to form the XeF 3 cation 33 BiF5 XeF4 XeF 3 BiF 6Aqueous species edit In aqueous solution the Bi3 ion is solvated to form the aqua ion Bi H2 O 3 8 in strongly acidic conditions 58 At pH gt 0 polynuclear species exist the most important of which is believed to be the octahedral complex Bi6 O4 OH 4 6 59 Occurrence and production editSee also List of countries by bismuth production nbsp Bismite mineral nbsp Chunk of a broken bismuth ingotIn the Earth s crust bismuth is about twice as abundant as gold The most important ores of bismuth are bismuthinite and bismite 18 Native bismuth is known from Australia Bolivia and China 60 61 World bismuth production 2022 in tonnes Country Refining 62 China 16 000Laos 2 000South Korea 950Japan 480Kazakhstan 220Other 350Total 20 000According to the United States Geological Survey USGS 10 200 tonnes of bismuth were produced worldwide by mining and 17 100 tonnes by refining in 2016 Since then USGS does not provide mining data for bismuth considering them unreliable Globally bismuth is mostly produced by refining as a byproduct of extraction of other metals such as lead copper tin molybdenum and tungsten though the refining to mining ratio depends on the country 63 64 65 66 Bismuth travels in crude lead bullion which can contain up to 10 bismuth through several stages of refining until it is removed by the Kroll Betterton process which separates the impurities as slag or the electrolytic Betts process Bismuth will behave similarly with another of its major metals copper 64 The raw bismuth metal from both processes contains still considerable amounts of other metals foremost lead By reacting the molten mixture with chlorine gas the metals are converted to their chlorides while bismuth remains unchanged Impurities can also be removed by various other methods for example with fluxes and treatments yielding high purity bismuth metal over 99 Bi 67 Price edit nbsp World mine production and annual averages of bismuth price New York not adjusted for inflation 68 The price for pure bismuth metal has been relatively stable through most of the 20th century except for a spike in the 1970s Bismuth has always been produced mainly as a byproduct of lead refining and thus the price usually reflected the cost of recovery and the balance between production and demand 68 Prior to World War II demand for bismuth was small and mainly pharmaceutical bismuth compounds were used to treat such conditions as digestive disorders sexually transmitted diseases and burns Minor amounts of bismuth metal were consumed in fusible alloys for fire sprinkler systems and fuse wire During World War II bismuth was considered a strategic material used for solders fusible alloys medications and atomic research To stabilize the market the producers set the price at 1 25 per pound 2 75 kg during the war and at 2 25 per pound 4 96 kg from 1950 until 1964 68 In the early 1970s the price rose rapidly as a result of increasing demand for bismuth as a metallurgical additive to aluminium iron and steel This was followed by a decline owing to increased world production stabilized consumption and the recessions of 1980 and 1981 1982 In 1984 the price began to climb as consumption increased worldwide especially in the United States and Japan In the early 1990s research began on the evaluation of bismuth as a nontoxic replacement for lead in ceramic glazes fishing sinkers food processing equipment free machining brasses for plumbing applications lubricating greases and shot for waterfowl hunting 69 Growth in these areas remained slow during the middle 1990s in spite of the backing of lead replacement by the United States federal government but intensified around 2005 This resulted in a rapid and continuing increase in price 68 Recycling edit Most bismuth is produced as a byproduct of other metal extraction processes including the smelting of lead and also of tungsten and copper Its sustainability is dependent on increased recycling which is problematic 70 It was once believed that bismuth could be practically recycled from the soldered joints in electronic equipment Recent efficiencies in solder application in electronics mean there is substantially less solder deposited and thus less to recycle While recovering the silver from silver bearing solder may remain economic recovering bismuth is substantially less so 71 Dispersed bismuth is used in certain stomach medicines bismuth subsalicylate paints bismuth vanadate pearlescent cosmetics bismuth oxychloride and bismuth containing bullets Recycling bismuth from these uses is impractical 67 Applications edit nbsp 18th century engraving of bismuth processing During this era bismuth was used to treat some digestive complaints Bismuth has few commercial applications and those applications that use it generally require small quantities relative to other raw materials In the United States for example 733 tonnes of bismuth were consumed in 2016 of which 70 went into chemicals including pharmaceuticals pigments and cosmetics and 11 into bismuth alloys 67 In the early 1990s researchers began to evaluate bismuth as a nontoxic replacement for lead in various applications 67 Medicines edit Bismuth is an ingredient in some pharmaceuticals 8 although the use of some of these substances is declining 52 Bismuth subsalicylate is used to treat diarrhea 8 it is the active ingredient in such pink bismuth preparations as Pepto Bismol as well as the 2004 reformulation of Kaopectate It is also used to treat some other gastro intestinal diseases like shigellosis 72 and cadmium poisoning 8 The mechanism of action of this substance is still not well documented although an oligodynamic effect toxic effect of small doses of heavy metal ions on microbes may be involved in at least some cases Salicylic acid from hydrolysis of the compound is antimicrobial for toxogenic E coli an important pathogen in traveler s diarrhea 73 A combination of bismuth subsalicylate and bismuth subcitrate is used to treat the bacteria causing peptic ulcers 74 75 Bibrocathol is an organic bismuth containing compound used to treat eye infections 76 Bismuth subgallate the active ingredient in Devrom is used as an internal deodorant to treat malodor from flatulence and feces 77 78 Bismuth compounds including sodium bismuth tartrate were formerly used to treat syphilis 79 80 Arsenic combined with either bismuth or mercury was a mainstay of syphilis treatment from the 1920s until the advent of penicillin in 1943 81 Milk of bismuth an aqueous suspension of bismuth hydroxide and bismuth subcarbonate was marketed as an alimentary cure all in the early 20th century and has been used to treat gastrointestinal disorders 82 Bismuth subnitrate Bi5O OH 9 NO3 4 and bismuth subcarbonate Bi2O2 CO3 are also used in medicine 18 Cosmetics and pigments edit Bismuth oxychloride BiOCl is sometimes used in cosmetics as a pigment in paint for eye shadows hair sprays and nail polishes 8 52 83 84 This compound is found as the mineral bismoclite and in crystal form contains layers of atoms see figure above that refract light chromatically resulting in an iridescent appearance similar to nacre of pearl It was used as a cosmetic in ancient Egypt and in many places since Bismuth white also Spanish white can refer to either bismuth oxychloride or bismuth oxynitrate BiONO3 when used as a white pigment 85 Bismuth vanadate is used as a light stable non reactive paint pigment particularly for artists paints often as a replacement for the more toxic cadmium sulfide yellow and orange yellow pigments The most common variety in artists paints is a lemon yellow visually indistinguishable from its cadmium containing alternative 86 Metal and alloys edit Bismuth is used in alloys with other metals such as tin and lead Wood s metal an alloy of bismuth lead tin and cadmium is used in automatic sprinkler systems for fires It forms the largest part 50 of Rose s metal a fusible alloy which also contains 25 28 lead and 22 25 tin It was also used to make bismuth bronze which was used in the Bronze Age having been found in Inca knives at Machu Picchu 87 Lead replacement edit The density difference between lead 11 32 g cm3 and bismuth 9 78 g cm3 is small enough that for many ballistics and weighting applications bismuth can substitute for lead For example it can replace lead as a dense material in fishing sinkers It has been used as a replacement for lead in shot bullets and less lethal riot gun ammunition The Netherlands Denmark England Wales the United States and many other countries now prohibit the use of lead shot for the hunting of wetland birds as many birds are prone to lead poisoning owing to mistaken ingestion of lead instead of small stones and grit to aid digestion or even prohibit the use of lead for all hunting such as in the Netherlands Bismuth tin alloy shot is one alternative that provides similar ballistic performance to lead 67 Bismuth as a dense element of high atomic weight is used in bismuth impregnated latex shields to shield from X ray in medical examinations such as CTs mostly as it is considered non toxic 88 The European Union s Restriction of Hazardous Substances Directive RoHS for reduction of lead has broadened bismuth s use in electronics as a component of low melting point solders as a replacement for traditional tin lead solders 67 Its low toxicity will be especially important for solders to be used in food processing equipment and copper water pipes although it can also be used in other applications including those in the automobile industry in the European Union for example 89 Bismuth has been evaluated as a replacement for lead in free machining brasses for plumbing applications 90 although it does not equal the performance of leaded steels 89 Other metal uses and specialty alloys edit Many bismuth alloys have low melting points and are found in specialty applications such as solders Many automatic sprinklers electric fuses and safety devices in fire detection and suppression systems contain the eutectic In19 1 Cd5 3 Pb22 6 Sn8 3 Bi44 7 alloy that melts at 47 C 117 F 18 This is a convenient temperature since it is unlikely to be exceeded in normal living conditions Low melting alloys such as Bi Cd Pb Sn alloy which melts at 70 C are also used in automotive and aviation industries Before deforming a thin walled metal part it is filled with a melt or covered with a thin layer of the alloy to reduce the chance of breaking Then the alloy is removed by submerging the part in boiling water 91 Bismuth is used to make free machining steels and free machining aluminium alloys for precision machining properties It has similar effect to lead and improves the chip breaking during machining The shrinking on solidification in lead and the expansion of bismuth compensate each other and therefore lead and bismuth are often used in similar quantities 92 93 Similarly alloys containing comparable parts of bismuth and lead exhibit a very small change on the order 0 01 upon melting solidification or aging Such alloys are used in high precision casting e g in dentistry to create models and molds 91 Bismuth is also used as an alloying agent in production of malleable irons 67 and as a thermocouple material 18 Bismuth is also used in aluminium silicon cast alloys in order to refine silicon morphology However it indicated a poisoning effect on modification of strontium 94 95 Some bismuth alloys such as Bi35 Pb37 Sn25 are combined with non sticking materials such as mica glass and enamels because they easily wet them allowing to make joints to other parts Addition of bismuth to caesium enhances the quantum yield of caesium cathodes 52 Sintering of bismuth and manganese powders at 300 C produces a permanent magnet and magnetostrictive material which is used in ultrasonic generators and receivers working in the 10 100 kHz range and in magnetic and holographic memory devices 96 Other uses as compounds edit nbsp Bismuth vanadate a yellow pigmentBismuth is included in BSCCO bismuth strontium calcium copper oxide which is a group of similar superconducting compounds discovered in 1988 that exhibit the highest superconducting transition temperatures 97 Bismuth telluride is a semiconductor and an excellent thermoelectric material 52 98 Bi2Te3 diodes are used in mobile refrigerators CPU coolers and as detectors in infrared spectrophotometers 52 Bismuth oxide in its delta form is a solid electrolyte for oxygen This form normally breaks down below a high temperature threshold but can be electrodeposited well below this temperature in a highly alkaline solution 99 Bismuth germanate is a scintillator widely used in X ray and gamma ray detectors 100 Bismuth vanadate is an opaque yellow pigment used by some artists oil acrylic and watercolor paint companies primarily as a replacement for the more toxic cadmium sulfide yellows in the greenish yellow lemon to orange toned yellow range It performs practically identically to the cadmium pigments such as in terms of resistance to degradation from UV exposure opacity tinting strength and lack of reactivity when mixed with other pigments The most commonly used variety by artists paint makers is lemon in color In addition to being a replacement for several cadmium yellows it also serves as a non toxic visual replacement for the older chromate pigments made with zinc lead and strontium If a green pigment and barium sulfate for increased transparency are added it can also serve as a replacement for barium chromate which possesses a more greenish cast than the others In comparison with lead chromate it does not blacken due to hydrogen sulfide in the air a process accelerated by UV exposure and possesses a particularly brighter color than them especially the lemon which is the most translucent dull and fastest to blacken due to the higher percentage of lead sulfate required to produce that shade It is also used on a limited basis due to its cost as a vehicle paint pigment 101 102 A catalyst for making acrylic fibers 18 As an electrocatalyst in the conversion of CO2 to CO 103 Ingredient in lubricating greases 104 In crackling microstars dragon s eggs in pyrotechnics as the oxide subcarbonate or subnitrate 105 106 As catalyst for the fluorination of arylboronic pinacol esters through a Bi III Bi V catalytic cycle mimicking transition metals in electrophilic fluorination 107 Toxicology and ecotoxicology editSee also bismuthia a rare dermatological condition that results from the prolonged use of bismuth Scientific literature indicates that some of the compounds of bismuth are less toxic to humans via ingestion than other heavy metals lead arsenic antimony etc 8 presumably due to the comparatively low solubility of bismuth salts 108 Its biological half life for whole body retention is reported to be 5 days but it can remain in the kidney for years in people treated with bismuth compounds 109 Bismuth poisoning can occur and has according to some reports been common in relatively recent times 108 110 As with lead bismuth poisoning can result in the formation of a black deposit on the gingiva known as a bismuth line 111 112 113 Poisoning may be treated with dimercaprol however evidence for benefit is unclear 114 115 Bismuth s environmental impacts are not well known it may be less likely to bioaccumulate than some other heavy metals and this is an area of active research 116 117 See also editLead bismuth eutectic List of countries by bismuth production Bismuth minerals Patterns in natureReferences edit Standard Atomic Weights Bismuth CIAAW 2005 Prohaska Thomas Irrgeher Johanna Benefield Jacqueline Bohlke John K Chesson Lesley A Coplen Tyler B Ding Tiping Dunn Philip J H Groning Manfred Holden Norman E Meijer Harro A J 4 May 2022 Standard atomic weights of the elements 2021 IUPAC Technical Report Pure and Applied Chemistry doi 10 1515 pac 2019 0603 ISSN 1365 3075 Bi 0 state exists in a N heterocyclic carbene complex of dibismuthene see Deka Rajesh Orthaber Andreas 6 May 2022 Carbene chemistry of arsenic antimony and bismuth origin evolution and future prospects Royal Society of Chemistry 51 22 8540 8556 doi 10 1039 d2dt00755j PMID 35578901 S2CID 248675805 a b Cucka P Barrett C S 1962 The crystal structure of Bi and of solid solutions of Pb Sn Sb and Te in Bi Acta Crystallographica 15 9 865 doi 10 1107 S0365110X62002297 Weast Robert 1984 CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics Boca Raton Florida Chemical Rubber Company Publishing pp E110 ISBN 0 8493 0464 4 Kondev F G Wang M Huang W J Naimi S Audi G 2021 The NUBASE2020 evaluation of nuclear properties PDF Chinese Physics C 45 3 030001 doi 10 1088 1674 1137 abddae Dume Belle 23 April 2003 Bismuth breaks half life record for alpha decay Physicsworld a b c d e f g h i j k Kean Sam 2011 The Disappearing Spoon and other true tales of madness love and the history of the world from the Periodic Table of Elements New York Boston Back Bay Books pp 158 160 ISBN 978 0 316 051637 Harper Douglas bismuth Online Etymology Dictionary Bismuth Archived 28 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology Norman Nicholas C 1998 Chemistry of Arsenic Antimony and Bismuth Springer p 41 ISBN 978 0 7514 0389 3 Agricola Georgious 1955 1546 De Natura Fossilium New York Mineralogical Society of America p 178 Archived from the original on 14 May 2021 Retrieved 8 April 2019 Nicholson William 1819 Bismuth American edition of the British encyclopedia Or Dictionary of Arts and sciences comprising an accurate and popular view of the present improved state of human knowledge p 181 a b Weeks Mary Elvira 1932 The discovery of the elements II Elements known to the alchemists Journal of Chemical Education 9 1 11 Bibcode 1932JChEd 9 11W doi 10 1021 ed009p11 Giunta Carmen J Glossary of Archaic Chemical Terms Le Moyne College See also for other terms for bismuth including stannum glaciale glacial tin or ice tin Gordon Robert B Rutledge John W 1984 Bismuth Bronze from Machu Picchu Peru Science 223 4636 585 586 Bibcode 1984Sci 223 585G doi 10 1126 science 223 4636 585 JSTOR 1692247 PMID 17749940 S2CID 206572055 Pott Johann Heinrich 1738 De Wismutho Exercitationes Chymicae Berolini Apud Johannem Andream Rudigerum p 134 a b c d e f g h i j Hammond C R 2004 The Elements in Handbook of Chemistry and Physics 81st ed Boca Raton FL US CRC press p 4 1 ISBN 978 0 8493 0485 9 Geoffroy C F 1753 Sur Bismuth Histoire de l Academie Royale des Sciences Avec les Memoires de Mathematique amp de Physique Tirez des Registres de Cette Academie 190 a b Levason W Reid G 2003 Coordination Chemistry of the s p and f Metals Comprehensive Coordination Chemistry II Amsterdam Elsevier Pergamon doi 10 1016 B0 08 043748 6 02023 5 ISBN 0 08 043748 6 Kruger p 171 Jones H 1936 The Theory of the Galvomagnetic Effects in Bismuth Proceedings of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 155 886 653 663 Bibcode 1936RSPSA 155 653J doi 10 1098 rspa 1936 0126 JSTOR 96773 Hoffman C Meyer J Bartoli F Di Venere A Yi X Hou C Wang H Ketterson J Wong G 1993 Semimetal to semiconductor transition in bismuth thin films Phys Rev B 48 15 11431 11434 Bibcode 1993PhRvB 4811431H doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 48 11431 PMID 10007465 a b Wiberg p 768 Tracy George R Tropp Harry E Friedl Alfred E 1974 Modern physical science Holt Rinehart and Winston p 268 ISBN 978 0 03 007381 6 Tribe Alfred 1868 IX Freezing of water and bismuth Journal of the Chemical Society 21 71 doi 10 1039 JS8682100071 Papon Pierre Leblond Jacques Meijer Paul Herman Ernst 2006 The Physics of Phase Transitions Springer p 82 ISBN 978 3 540 33390 6 Tiller William A 1991 The science of crystallization microscopic interfacial phenomena Cambridge University Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 521 38827 6 Wiberg p 767 Kruger p 172 Boldyreva Elena 2010 High Pressure Crystallography From Fundamental Phenomena to Technological Applications Springer pp 264 265 ISBN 978 90 481 9257 1 Manghnani Murli H 25 30 July 1999 Science and Technology of High Pressure Proceedings of the International Conference on High Pressure Science and Technology AIRAPT 17 Vol 2 Honolulu Hawaii Universities Press India published 2000 p 1086 ISBN 978 81 7371 339 2 a b c d e Suzuki p 8 Wiberg pp 769 770 a b Greenwood pp 559 561 a b Kruger p 185 Suzuki p 9 Krabbe S W Mohan R S 2012 Environmentally friendly organic synthesis using Bi III compounds In Ollevier Thierry ed Topics in Current chemistry 311 Bismuth Mediated Organic Reactions Springer pp 100 110 ISBN 978 3 642 27239 4 Rich Ronald 2007 Inorganic Reactions in Water e book Springer ISBN 978 3 540 73962 3 Carvalho H G Penna M 1972 Alpha activity of 209 Bi Lettere al Nuovo Cimento 3 18 720 doi 10 1007 BF02824346 S2CID 120952231 Marcillac Pierre de Noel Coron Gerard Dambier Jacques Leblanc amp Jean Pierre Moalic 2003 Experimental detection of a particles from the radioactive decay of natural bismuth Nature 422 6934 876 878 Bibcode 2003Natur 422 876D doi 10 1038 nature01541 PMID 12712201 S2CID 4415582 a b Audi G Kondev F G Wang M Huang W J Naimi S 2017 The NUBASE2016 evaluation of nuclear properties PDF Chinese Physics C 41 3 030001 Bibcode 2017ChPhC 41c0001A doi 10 1088 1674 1137 41 3 030001 Loveland Walter D Morrissey David J Seaborg Glenn T 2006 Modern Nuclear Chemistry John Wiley amp Sons p 78 Bibcode 2005mnc book L ISBN 978 0 471 11532 8 Peppard D F Mason G W Gray P R Mech J F 1952 Occurrence of the 4n 1 series in nature PDF Journal of the American Chemical Society 74 23 6081 6084 doi 10 1021 ja01143a074 Imam S 2001 Advancements in cancer therapy with alpha emitters a review International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics 51 1 271 8 doi 10 1016 S0360 3016 01 01585 1 PMID 11516878 Acton Ashton 2011 Issues in Cancer Epidemiology and Research ScholarlyEditions p 520 ISBN 978 1 4649 6352 0 Greenwood p 553 a b c d e f Godfrey S M McAuliffe C A Mackie A G Pritchard R G 1998 Nicholas C Norman ed Chemistry of arsenic antimony and bismuth Springer pp 67 84 ISBN 978 0 7514 0389 3 Scott Thomas Eagleson Mary 1994 Concise encyclopedia chemistry Walter de Gruyter p 136 ISBN 978 3 11 011451 5 Greenwood p 578 An Introduction to the Study of Chemistry Forgotten Books p 363 ISBN 978 1 4400 5235 4 a b c d e f Kruger p 184 bismuthide Your Dictionary Retrieved 7 April 2020 Okamoto H 1 March 2002 Bi Nd Bismuth Neodymium Journal of Phase Equilibria 23 2 191 doi 10 1361 1054971023604224 3D counterpart to graphene discovered UPDATE KurzweilAI 20 January 2014 Retrieved 28 January 2014 Liu Z K Zhou B Zhang Y Wang Z J Weng H M Prabhakaran D Mo S K Shen Z X Fang Z Dai X Hussain Z Chen Y L 2014 Discovery of a Three Dimensional Topological Dirac Semimetal Na3Bi Science 343 6173 864 7 arXiv 1310 0391 Bibcode 2014Sci 343 864L doi 10 1126 science 1245085 PMID 24436183 S2CID 206552029 a b Gillespie R J Passmore J 1975 Emeleus H J Sharp A G eds Advances in Inorganic Chemistry and Radiochemistry Academic Press pp 77 78 ISBN 978 0 12 023617 6 Persson Ingmar 2010 Hydrated metal ions in aqueous solution How regular are their structures Pure and Applied Chemistry 82 10 1901 1917 doi 10 1351 PAC CON 09 10 22 Naslund Jan Persson Ingmar Sandstrom Magnus 2000 Solvation of the Bismuth III Ion by Water Dimethyl Sulfoxide N N Dimethylpropyleneurea and N N Dimethylthioformamide An EXAFS Large Angle X ray Scattering and Crystallographic Structural Study Inorganic Chemistry 39 18 4012 4021 doi 10 1021 ic000022m PMID 11198855 Anthony John W Bideaux Richard A Bladh Kenneth W Nichols Monte C eds Bismuth PDF Handbook of Mineralogy Elements Sulfides Sulfosalts Chantilly VA US Mineralogical Society of America ISBN 978 0 9622097 0 3 Retrieved 5 December 2011 Kruger pp 172 173 Merrill Adam M 2023 USGS Minerals Yearbook Bismuth PDF United States Geological Survey Kruger p 173 a b Ojebuoboh Funsho K 1992 Bismuth Production properties and applications JOM 44 4 46 49 Bibcode 1992JOM 44d 46O doi 10 1007 BF03222821 S2CID 52993615 Horsley G W 1957 The preparation of bismuth for use in a liquid metal fuelled reactor Journal of Nuclear Energy 6 1 2 41 doi 10 1016 0891 3919 57 90180 8 Shevtsov Yu V Beizel N F 2011 Pb distribution in multistep bismuth refining products Inorganic Materials 47 2 139 doi 10 1134 S0020168511020166 S2CID 96931735 a b c d e f g Singerling Sheryl A Callaghan Robert M 2018 USGS Minerals Yearbook Bismuth PDF United States Geological Survey a b c d Bismuth Statistics and Information see Metal Prices in the United States through 1998 for a price summary and Historical Statistics for Mineral and Material Commodities in the United States for production USGS Suzuki p 14 European Commission Directorate General for Internal Market Industry Entrepreneurship and SMEs 2018 Report on critical raw materials and the circular economy European Commission Directorate General for Internal Market Industry Entrepreneurship and SMEs doi 10 2873 167813 ISBN 9789279946264 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Warburg N IKP Department of Life Cycle Engineering PDF University of Stuttgart Archived from the original PDF on 25 February 2009 Retrieved 5 May 2009 CDC shigellosis Sox TE Olson CA 1989 Binding and killing of bacteria by bismuth subsalicylate Antimicrob Agents Chemother 33 12 2075 82 doi 10 1128 AAC 33 12 2075 PMC 172824 PMID 2694949 P 74 2009 European Medicines Agency decision of 20 April 2009 on the granting of a product specific waiver for Bismuth subcitrate potassium Metronidazole Tetracycline hydrochloride EMEA 000382 PIP01 08 in accordance with Regulation EC No 1901 2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council as amended PDF European Medicines Agency 10 June 2009 Urgesi R Cianci R Riccioni ME 2012 Update on triple therapy for eradication of Helicobacter pylori current status of the art Clinical and Experimental Gastroenterology 5 151 7 doi 10 2147 CEG S25416 PMC 3449761 PMID 23028235 Gurtler L January 2002 Chapter 2 The Eye and Conjunctiva as Target of Entry for Infectious Agents Prevention by Protection and by Antiseptic Prophylaxis In Kramer A Behrens Baumann W eds Antiseptic prophylaxis and therapy in ocular infections principles clinical practice and infection control Developments in Ophthalmology Vol 33 Basel Karger pp 9 13 doi 10 1159 000065934 ISBN 978 3 8055 7316 0 PMID 12236131 Gorbach SL September 1990 Bismuth therapy in gastrointestinal diseases Gastroenterology 99 3 863 75 doi 10 1016 0016 5085 90 90983 8 PMID 2199292 Sparberg M March 1974 Correspondence Bismuth subgallate as an effective means for the control of ileostomy odor a double blind study Gastroenterology 66 3 476 doi 10 1016 S0016 5085 74 80150 2 PMID 4813513 Parnell R J G 1924 Bismuth in the Treatment of Syphilis Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 17 War section 19 26 doi 10 1177 003591572401702604 PMC 2201253 PMID 19984212 Giemsa Gustav 1924 U S patent 1 540 117 Manufacture of bismuth tartrates Frith John November 2012 Syphilis Its Early History and Treatment Until Penicillin and the Debate on its Origins Journal of Military and Veterans Health 20 4 54 Retrieved 30 January 2022 Milk of Bismuth Archived from the original on 4 June 2013 Retrieved 13 August 2022 Maile Frank J Pfaff Gerhard Reynders Peter 2005 Effect pigments past present and future Progress in Organic Coatings 54 3 150 doi 10 1016 j porgcoat 2005 07 003 Pfaff Gerhard 2008 Special effect pigments Technical basics and applications Vincentz Network GmbH p 36 ISBN 978 3 86630 905 0 Sadler Peter J 1991 Chapter 1 In Sykes A G ed ADVANCES IN INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Volume 36 Academic Press ISBN 0 12 023636 2 Weldon Dwight G 2009 Failure analysis of paints and coatings Chichester U K Wiley p 40 ISBN 978 1 61583 267 5 OCLC 608477934 Gordon Robert B Rutledge John W 1984 Bismuth Bronze from Machu Picchu Peru Science American Association for the Advancement of Science 223 4636 585 586 Bibcode 1984Sci 223 585G doi 10 1126 science 223 4636 585 JSTOR 1692247 PMID 17749940 S2CID 206572055 Hopper KD King SH Lobell ME TenHave TR Weaver JS 1997 The breast inplane x ray protection during diagnostic thoracic CT shielding with bismuth radioprotective garments Radiology 205 3 853 8 doi 10 1148 radiology 205 3 9393547 PMID 9393547 a b Lohse Joachim Zangl Stephanie Gross Rita Gensch Carl Otto Deubzer Otmar September 2007 Adaptation to Scientific and Technical Progress of Annex II Directive 2000 53 EC PDF European Commission Retrieved 11 September 2009 La Fontaine A Keast V J 2006 Compositional distributions in classical and lead free brasses Materials Characterization 57 4 5 424 doi 10 1016 j matchar 2006 02 005 a b Kruger p 183 Llewellyn D T Hudd Roger C 1998 Steels Metallurgy and applications Butterworth Heinemann p 239 ISBN 978 0 7506 3757 2 Davis J R 1993 Aluminum and Aluminum Alloys ASM International p 41 ISBN 978 0 87170 496 2 Farahany Saeed A Ourdjini M H Idris L T Thai 2011 Poisoning effect of bismuth on modification behavior of strontium in LM25 alloy Journal of Bulletin of Materials Science 34 6 1223 1231 doi 10 1007 s12034 011 0239 5 Farahany Saeed A Ourdjini M H Idris L T Thai 2011 Effect of bismuth on the microstructure of unmodified and Sr modified Al 7 Si 0 4Mg alloy Journal of Transactions of Nonferrous Metals Society of China 21 7 1455 1464 doi 10 1016 S1003 6326 11 60881 9 S2CID 73719425 Suzuki p 15 BSCCO National High Magnetic Field Laboratory Archived from the original on 12 April 2013 Retrieved 18 January 2010 Tritt Terry M 2000 Recent trends in thermoelectric materials research Academic Press p 12 ISBN 978 0 12 752178 7 Maric Radenka Mirshekari Gholamreza 2020 Solid oxide fuel cells from fundamental principles to complete systems Boca Raton p 70 ISBN 978 0 429 52784 5 OCLC 1228350036 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Saha Gopal B 2006 Physics and radiobiology of nuclear medicine New York Springer p 82 ISBN 978 0 387 36281 6 OCLC 655784658 Tucks Andreas Beck Horst P 2007 The photochromic effect of bismuth vanadate pigments Investigations on the photochromic mechanism Dyes and Pigments 72 2 163 doi 10 1016 j dyepig 2005 08 027 Muller Albrecht 2003 Yellow pigments Coloring of plastics Fundamentals colorants preparations Hanser Verlag pp 91 93 ISBN 978 1 56990 352 0 DiMeglio John L Rosenthal Joel 2013 Selective conversion of CO2 to CO with high efficiency using an bismuth based electrocatalyst Journal of the American Chemical Society 135 24 8798 8801 doi 10 1021 ja4033549 PMC 3725765 PMID 23735115 Mortier Roy M Fox Malcolm F Orszulik Stefan T 2010 Chemistry and Technology of Lubricants Springer p 430 Bibcode 2010ctl book M ISBN 978 1 4020 8661 8 Croteau Gerry Dills Russell Beaudreau Marc Davis Mac 2010 Emission factors and exposures from ground level pyrotechnics Atmospheric Environment 44 27 3295 Bibcode 2010AtmEn 44 3295C doi 10 1016 j atmosenv 2010 05 048 Ledgard Jared 2006 The Preparatory Manual of Black Powder and Pyrotechnics Lulu pp 207 319 370 518 search ISBN 978 1 4116 8574 1 Planas Oriol Wang Feng Leutzsch Markus Cornella Josep 2020 Fluorination of arylboronic esters enabled by bismuth redox catalysis Science 367 6475 313 317 Bibcode 2020Sci 367 313P doi 10 1126 science aaz2258 hdl 21 11116 0000 0005 DB57 3 PMID 31949081 S2CID 210698047 a b DiPalma Joseph R 2001 Bismuth Toxicity Often Mild Can Result in Severe Poisonings Emergency Medicine News 23 3 16 doi 10 1097 00132981 200104000 00012 Fowler B A amp Sexton M J 2007 Bismuth In Nordberg Gunnar ed Handbook on the toxicology of metals Academic Press pp 433 ff ISBN 978 0 12 369413 3 Data on Bismuth s health and environmental effects Lenntech com Retrieved on 17 December 2011 Bismuth line in TheFreeDictionary s Medical dictionary Farlex Inc Levantine Ashley Almeyda John 1973 Drug induced changes in pigmentation British Journal of Dermatology 89 1 105 12 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2133 1973 tb01932 x PMID 4132858 S2CID 7175799 Kruger pp 187 188 World Health Organization 2009 Stuart MC Kouimtzi M Hill SR eds WHO Model Formulary 2008 World Health Organization p 62 hdl 10665 44053 ISBN 9789241547659 Dimercaprol The American Society of Health System Pharmacists Retrieved 8 December 2016 Boriova et al 2015 Bismuth III Volatilization and Immobilization by Filamentous Fungus Aspergillus clavatus During Aerobic Incubation Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 68 2 405 411 Bibcode 2015ArECT 68 405B doi 10 1007 s00244 014 0096 5 PMID 25367214 S2CID 30197424 Boriova et al 2013 Bioaccumulation and biosorption of bismuth Bi III by filamentous fungus Aspergillus clavatus PDF Student Scientific Conference PriF UK 2013 Proceedings of Reviewed Contributions Bibliography edit nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Brown R D Jr Annual Average Bismuth Price USGS 1998 Greenwood N N amp Earnshaw A 1997 Chemistry of the Elements 2nd ed Oxford Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 7506 3365 9 Kruger Joachim Winkler Peter Luderitz Eberhard Luck Manfred Wolf Hans Uwe 2003 Bismuth Bismuth Alloys and Bismuth Compounds Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Wiley VCH Weinheim pp 171 189 doi 10 1002 14356007 a04 171 ISBN 978 3527306732 Suzuki Hitomi 2001 Organobismuth Chemistry Elsevier pp 1 20 ISBN 978 0 444 20528 5 Wiberg Egon Holleman A F Wiberg Nils 2001 Inorganic chemistry Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 352651 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bismuth nbsp Look up bismuth in Wiktionary the free dictionary Laboratory growth of large crystals of Bismuth by Jan Kihle Crystal Pulling Laboratories Norway Bismuth at The Periodic Table of Videos University of Nottingham Bismuth breaks half life record for alpha decay Bismuth Crystals Instructions amp Pictures Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bismuth amp oldid 1206830208, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.