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Heavy metals

Heavy metals are generally defined as metals with relatively high densities, atomic weights, or atomic numbers. The criteria used, and whether metalloids are included, vary depending on the author and context.[2] In metallurgy, for example, a heavy metal may be defined on the basis of density, whereas in physics the distinguishing criterion might be atomic number, while a chemist would likely be more concerned with chemical behaviour. More specific definitions have been published, none of which have been widely accepted. The definitions surveyed in this article encompass up to 96 out of the 118 known chemical elements; only mercury, lead and bismuth meet all of them. Despite this lack of agreement, the term (plural or singular) is widely used in science. A density of more than 5 g/cm3 is sometimes quoted as a commonly used criterion and is used in the body of this article.

Crystals of osmium, a heavy metal nearly twice as dense as lead[1]

The earliest known metals—common metals such as iron, copper, and tin, and precious metals such as silver, gold, and platinum—are heavy metals. From 1809 onward, light metals, such as magnesium, aluminium, and titanium, were discovered, as well as less well-known heavy metals including gallium, thallium, and hafnium.

Some heavy metals are either essential nutrients (typically iron, cobalt, and zinc), or relatively harmless (such as ruthenium, silver, and indium), but can be toxic in larger amounts or certain forms. Other heavy metals, such as arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, are highly poisonous. Potential sources of heavy metal poisoning include mining, tailings, smelting, industrial waste, agricultural runoff, occupational exposure, paints and treated timber.

Physical and chemical characterisations of heavy metals need to be treated with caution, as the metals involved are not always consistently defined. As well as being relatively dense, heavy metals tend to be less reactive than lighter metals and have far fewer soluble sulfides and hydroxides. While it is relatively easy to distinguish a heavy metal such as tungsten from a lighter metal such as sodium, a few heavy metals, such as zinc, mercury, and lead, have some of the characteristics of lighter metals; and lighter metals such as beryllium, scandium, and titanium, have some of the characteristics of heavier metals.

Heavy metals are relatively scarce in the Earth's crust but are present in many aspects of modern life. They are used in, for example, golf clubs, cars, antiseptics, self-cleaning ovens, plastics, solar panels, mobile phones, and particle accelerators.

Definitions edit

Heat map of heavy metals in the periodic table
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
1  H He
2  Li Be B C N O F Ne
3  Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar
4  K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr
5  Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe
6  Cs Ba   Lu Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn
7  Fr Ra   Lr Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Cn Nh Fl Mc Lv Ts Og
 
  La Ce Pr Nd Pm Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb
  Ac Th Pa U Np Pu Am Cm Bk Cf Es Fm Md No
 
Number of criteria met:
Number of elements:
  
10
3
  
9
5
  
8
14
  
6–7
56
  
4–5
14
  
1–3
4
  
0
3
  
nonmetals
19
This table shows the number of heavy metal criteria met by each metal, out of the ten criteria listed in this section i.e. two based on density, three on atomic weight, two on atomic number, and three on chemical behaviour.[n 1] It illustrates the lack of agreement surrounding the concept, with the possible exception of mercury, lead and bismuth.

Six elements near the end of periods (rows) 4 to 7 sometimes considered metalloids are treated here as metals: they are germanium (Ge), arsenic (As), selenium (Se), antimony (Sb), tellurium (Te), and astatine (At).[16][n 2] Oganesson (Og) is treated as a nonmetal.

Metals enclosed by a dashed line have (or, for At and Fm–Ts, are predicted to have) densities of more than 5 g/cm3.

There is no widely agreed criterion-based definition of a heavy metal. Different meanings may be attached to the term, depending on the context. In metallurgy, for example, a heavy metal may be defined on the basis of density,[17] whereas in physics the distinguishing criterion might be atomic number,[18] and a chemist or biologist would likely be more concerned with chemical behaviour.[10]

Density criteria range from above 3.5 g/cm3 to above 7 g/cm3.[3] Atomic weight definitions can range from greater than sodium (atomic weight 22.98);[3] greater than 40 (excluding s- and f-block metals, hence starting with scandium);[4] or more than 200, i.e. from mercury onwards.[5] Atomic numbers of heavy metals are generally given as greater than 20 (calcium);[3] sometimes this is capped at 92 (uranium).[6] Definitions based on atomic number have been criticised for including metals with low densities. For example, rubidium in group (column) 1 of the periodic table has an atomic number of 37 but a density of only 1.532 g/cm3, which is below the threshold figure used by other authors.[19] The same problem may occur with definitions which are based on atomic weight.[20]

The United States Pharmacopeia includes a test for heavy metals that involves precipitating metallic impurities as their coloured sulfides."[7][n 3] In 1997, Stephen Hawkes, a chemistry professor writing in the context of fifty years' experience with the term, said it applied to "metals with insoluble sulfides and hydroxides, whose salts produce colored solutions in water and whose complexes are usually colored". On the basis of the metals he had seen referred to as heavy metals, he suggested it would be useful to define them as (in general) all the metals in periodic table columns 3 to 16 that are in row 4 or greater, in other words, the transition metals and post-transition metals.[10][n 4] The lanthanides satisfy Hawkes' three-part description; the status of the actinides is not completely settled.[n 5][n 6]

In biochemistry, heavy metals are sometimes defined—on the basis of the Lewis acid (electronic pair acceptor) behaviour of their ions in aqueous solution—as class B and borderline metals.[41] In this scheme, class A metal ions prefer oxygen donors; class B ions prefer nitrogen or sulfur donors; and borderline or ambivalent ions show either class A or B characteristics, depending on the circumstances.[n 7] Class A metals, which tend to have low electronegativity and form bonds with large ionic character, are the alkali and alkaline earths, aluminium, the group 3 metals, and the lanthanides and actinides.[n 8] Class B metals, which tend to have higher electronegativity and form bonds with considerable covalent character, are mainly the heavier transition and post-transition metals. Borderline metals largely comprise the lighter transition and post-transition metals (plus arsenic and antimony). The distinction between the class A metals and the other two categories is sharp.[45] A frequently cited proposal[46] to use these classification categories instead of the more evocative[11] name heavy metal has not been widely adopted.[47]

List of heavy metals based on density edit

A density of more than 5 g/cm3 is sometimes mentioned as a common heavy metal defining factor[48] and, in the absence of a unanimous definition, is used to populate this list and, unless otherwise stated, guide the remainder of the article. Metalloids meeting the applicable criteria–arsenic and antimony, for example—are sometimes counted as heavy metals, particularly in environmental chemistry,[49] as is the case here. Selenium (density 4.8 g/cm3)[50] is also included in the list, though it falls marginally short of the density criterion and is less commonly recognised as a metalloid[16] but has a waterborne chemistry similar in some respects to that of arsenic and antimony.[51] Other metals sometimes classified or treated as "heavy" metals, such as beryllium[52] (density 1.8 g/cm3),[53] aluminium[52] (2.7 g/cm3),[54] calcium[55] (1.55 g/cm3),[56] and barium[55] (3.6 g/cm3)[57] are here treated as light metals and, in general, are not further considered.

Produced mainly by commercial mining (informally classified by economic significance)
Strategic (30)
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
Considered vital to multiple nations'
strategic interests[58]
These 30 include 22 listed here and
8 below (6 precious & 2 commodity).
Precious (8)
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
Rare and costly[59]
Commodity (9)
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
Traded by the tonne on the LME
Minor (14)
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
Neither strategic, precious, nor commodity
Produced mainly by artificial transmutation (informally classified by stability)
Long-lived (14)
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
Half-life greater than 1 day
Ephemeral (17)
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
Half-life less than 1 day
Antimony, arsenic, germanium and tellurium are commonly recognised as metalloids; selenium less commonly so.[16]
Astatine is predicted to be a metal.[60]
All isotopes of these 34 elements are unstable and hence radioactive. While this is also true of bismuth, it is not so marked since its half-life of 19 billion billion years is over a billion times the 13.8-billion-year estimated age of the universe.[61][62]
These nine elements do occur naturally but in amounts too small for economically viable extraction.[63]

Origins and use of the term edit

The heaviness of naturally occurring metals such as gold, copper, and iron may have been noticed in prehistory and, in light of their malleability, led to the first attempts to craft metal ornaments, tools, and weapons.[64] All metals discovered from then until 1809 had relatively high densities; their heaviness was regarded as a singularly distinguishing criterion.[65]

From 1809 onwards, light metals such as sodium, potassium, and strontium were isolated. Their low densities challenged conventional wisdom and it was proposed to refer to them as metalloids (meaning "resembling metals in form or appearance").[66] This suggestion was ignored; the new elements came to be recognised as metals, and the term metalloid was then used to refer to nonmetallic elements and, later, elements that were hard to describe as either metals or nonmetals.[67]

An early use of the term heavy metal dates from 1817, when the German chemist Leopold Gmelin divided the elements into nonmetals, light metals, and heavy metals.[68] Light metals had densities of 0.860–5.0 g/cm3; heavy metals 5.308–22.000.[69][n 9] The term later became associated with elements of high atomic weight or high atomic number.[19] It is sometimes used interchangeably with the term heavy element. For example, in discussing the history of nuclear chemistry, Magee[70] notes that the actinides were once thought to represent a new heavy element transition group whereas Seaborg and co-workers "favoured ... a heavy metal rare-earth like series ...". In astronomy, however, a heavy element is any element heavier than hydrogen and helium.[71]

Criticism edit

In 2002, Scottish toxicologist John Duffus reviewed the definitions used over the previous 60 years and concluded they were so diverse as to effectively render the term meaningless.[72] Along with this finding, the heavy metal status of some metals is occasionally challenged on the grounds that they are too light, or are involved in biological processes, or rarely constitute environmental hazards. Examples include scandium (too light);[19][73] vanadium to zinc (biological processes);[74] and rhodium, indium, and osmium (too rare).[75]

Popularity edit

Despite its questionable meaning, the term heavy metal appears regularly in scientific literature. A 2010 study found that it had been increasingly used and seemed to have become part of the language of science.[76] It is said to be an acceptable term, given its convenience and familiarity, as long as it is accompanied by a strict definition.[41] The counterparts to the heavy metals, the light metals, are alluded to by The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society as including "aluminium, magnesium, beryllium, titanium, lithium, and other reactive metals."[77]

Biological role edit

Amount of heavy metals in
an average 70 kg human body
Element Milligrams[78]
Iron 4000 4000
 
Zinc 2500 2500
 
Lead[n 10] 120 120
 
Copper 70 70
 
Tin[n 11] 30 30
 
Vanadium 20 20
 
Cadmium 20 20
 
Nickel[n 12] 15 15
 
Selenium[n 13] 14 14
 
Manganese 12 12
 
Other[n 14] 200 200
 
Total 7000

Trace amounts of some heavy metals, mostly in period 4, are required for certain biological processes. These are iron and copper (oxygen and electron transport); cobalt (complex syntheses and cell metabolism); zinc (hydroxylation);[83] vanadium and manganese (enzyme regulation or functioning); chromium (glucose utilisation); nickel (cell growth); arsenic (metabolic growth in some animals and possibly in humans) and selenium (antioxidant functioning and hormone production).[84] Periods 5 and 6 contain fewer essential heavy metals, consistent with the general pattern that heavier elements tend to be less abundant and that scarcer elements are less likely to be nutritionally essential.[85] In period 5, molybdenum is required for the catalysis of redox reactions; cadmium is used by some marine diatoms for the same purpose; and tin may be required for growth in a few species.[86] In period 6, tungsten is required by some archaea and bacteria for metabolic processes.[87] A deficiency of any of these period 4–6 essential heavy metals may increase susceptibility to heavy metal poisoning[88] (conversely, an excess may also have adverse biological effects). An average 70 kg human body is about 0.01% heavy metals (~7 g, equivalent to the weight of two dried peas, with iron at 4 g, zinc at 2.5 g, and lead at 0.12 g comprising the three main constituents), 2% light metals (~1.4 kg, the weight of a bottle of wine) and nearly 98% nonmetals (mostly water).[89][n 15]

A few non-essential heavy metals have been observed to have biological effects. Gallium, germanium (a metalloid), indium, and most lanthanides can stimulate metabolism, and titanium promotes growth in plants[90] (though it is not always considered a heavy metal).

Toxicity edit

Heavy metals are often assumed to be highly toxic or damaging to the environment.[91] Some are, while certain others are toxic only if taken in excess or encountered in certain forms. Inhalation of certain metals, either as fine dust or most commonly as fumes, can also result in a condition called metal fume fever.

Environmental heavy metals edit

Chromium, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead have the greatest potential to cause harm on account of their extensive use, the toxicity of some of their combined or elemental forms, and their widespread distribution in the environment.[92] Hexavalent chromium, for example, is highly toxic as are mercury vapour and many mercury compounds.[93] These five elements have a strong affinity for sulfur; in the human body they usually bind, via thiol groups (–SH), to enzymes responsible for controlling the speed of metabolic reactions. The resulting sulfur-metal bonds inhibit the proper functioning of the enzymes involved; human health deteriorates, sometimes fatally.[94] Chromium (in its hexavalent form) and arsenic are carcinogens; cadmium causes a degenerative bone disease; and mercury and lead damage the central nervous system.

Lead is the most prevalent heavy metal contaminant.[95] Levels in the aquatic environments of industrialised societies have been estimated to be two to three times those of pre-industrial levels.[96] As a component of tetraethyl lead, (CH
3
CH
2
)
4
Pb
, it was used extensively in gasoline from the 1930s until the 1970s.[97] Although the use of leaded gasoline was largely phased out in North America by 1996, soils next to roads built before this time retain high lead concentrations.[98] Later research demonstrated a statistically significant correlation between the usage rate of leaded gasoline and violent crime in the United States; taking into account a 22-year time lag (for the average age of violent criminals), the violent crime curve virtually tracked the lead exposure curve.[99]

Other heavy metals noted for their potentially hazardous nature, usually as toxic environmental pollutants, include manganese (central nervous system damage);[100] cobalt and nickel (carcinogens);[101] copper,[102] zinc,[103] selenium[104] and silver[105] (endocrine disruption, congenital disorders, or general toxic effects in fish, plants, birds, or other aquatic organisms); tin, as organotin (central nervous system damage);[106] antimony (a suspected carcinogen);[107] and thallium (central nervous system damage).[102][n 16][n 17]

Nutritionally essential heavy metals edit

Heavy metals essential for life can be toxic if taken in excess; some have notably toxic forms. Vanadium pentoxide (V2O5) is carcinogenic in animals and, when inhaled, causes DNA damage.[102] The purple permanganate ion MnO
4
is a liver and kidney poison.[111] Ingesting more than 0.5 grams of iron can induce cardiac collapse; such overdoses most commonly occur in children and may result in death within 24 hours.[102] Nickel carbonyl (Ni(CO)4), at 30 parts per million, can cause respiratory failure, brain damage and death.[102] Imbibing a gram or more of copper sulfate (CuSO4) can be fatal; survivors may be left with major organ damage.[112] More than five milligrams of selenium is highly toxic; this is roughly ten times the 0.45 milligram recommended maximum daily intake;[113] long-term poisoning can have paralytic effects.[102][n 18]

Other heavy metals edit

A few other non-essential heavy metals have one or more toxic forms. Kidney failure and fatalities have been recorded arising from the ingestion of germanium dietary supplements (~15 to 300 g in total consumed over a period of two months to three years).[102] Exposure to osmium tetroxide (OsO4) may cause permanent eye damage and can lead to respiratory failure[115] and death.[116] Indium salts are toxic if more than few milligrams are ingested and will affect the kidneys, liver, and heart.[117] Cisplatin (PtCl2(NH3)2), an important drug used to kill cancer cells, is also a kidney and nerve poison.[102] Bismuth compounds can cause liver damage if taken in excess; insoluble uranium compounds, as well as the dangerous radiation they emit, can cause permanent kidney damage.[118]

Exposure sources edit

Heavy metals can degrade air, water, and soil quality, and subsequently cause health issues in plants, animals, and people, when they become concentrated as a result of industrial activities.[119][120] Common sources of heavy metals in this context include mining, smelting and industrial wastes; vehicle emissions; motor oil;[121] fuels used by ships and heavy machineries; construction works; fertilisers;[122] pesticides; paints; dyes and pigments; renovation; illegal depositing of construction and demolition waste; open-top roll-off dumpster; welding, brazing and soldering; glassworking;[123] concrete works; roadworks; use of recycled materials; DIY Metal Projects; incinerators;[124] burning of joss paper; open burning of waste in rural areas; contaminated ventilation system; food contaminated by the environment or by the packaging; armaments; lead–acid batteries; electronic waste recycling yard; and treated timber;[125] aging water supply infrastructure;[126] and microplastics floating in the world's oceans.[127] Recent examples of heavy metal contamination and health risks include the occurrence of Minamata disease, in Japan (1932–1968; lawsuits ongoing as of 2016);[128] the Bento Rodrigues dam disaster in Brazil,[129] high levels of lead in drinking water supplied to the residents of Flint, Michigan, in the north-east of the United States[130] and 2015 Hong Kong heavy metal in drinking water incidents.

Formation, abundance, occurrence, and extraction edit

 
Heavy metals in the Earth's crust:
abundance and main occurrence or source[n 19]
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
1  H He
2  Li Be B C N O F Ne
3  Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar
4  K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr
5  Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te  I  Xe
6  Cs Ba   Lu Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi
7  Ra  
  La Ce Pr Nd Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb
  Th Pa U
 
   Most abundant (56,300 ppm by weight)
   Rare (0.01–0.99 ppm)
   Abundant (100–999 ppm)
   Very rare (0.0001–0.0099 ppm)
   Uncommon (1–99 ppm)
   Least abundant (~0.000001 ppm)
 
Heavy metals left of the dividing line occur (or are sourced) mainly as lithophiles; those to the right, as chalcophiles except gold (a siderophile) and tin (a lithophile).

Heavy metals up to the vicinity of iron (in the periodic table) are largely made via stellar nucleosynthesis. In this process, lighter elements from hydrogen to silicon undergo successive fusion reactions inside stars, releasing light and heat and forming heavier elements with higher atomic numbers.[134]

Heavier heavy metals are not usually formed this way since fusion reactions involving such nuclei would consume rather than release energy.[135] Rather, they are largely synthesised (from elements with a lower atomic number) by neutron capture, with the two main modes of this repetitive capture being the s-process and the r-process. In the s-process ("s" stands for "slow"), singular captures are separated by years or decades, allowing the less stable nuclei to beta decay,[136] while in the r-process ("rapid"), captures happen faster than nuclei can decay. Therefore, the s-process takes a more or less clear path: for example, stable cadmium-110 nuclei are successively bombarded by free neutrons inside a star until they form cadmium-115 nuclei which are unstable and decay to form indium-115 (which is nearly stable, with a half-life 30,000 times the age of the universe). These nuclei capture neutrons and form indium-116, which is unstable, and decays to form tin-116, and so on.[134][137][n 20] In contrast, there is no such path in the r-process. The s-process stops at bismuth due to the short half-lives of the next two elements, polonium and astatine, which decay to bismuth or lead. The r-process is so fast it can skip this zone of instability and go on to create heavier elements such as thorium and uranium.[139]

Heavy metals condense in planets as a result of stellar evolution and destruction processes. Stars lose much of their mass when it is ejected late in their lifetimes, and sometimes thereafter as a result of a neutron star merger,[140][n 21] thereby increasing the abundance of elements heavier than helium in the interstellar medium. When gravitational attraction causes this matter to coalesce and collapse, new stars and planets are formed.[142]

The Earth's crust is made of approximately 5% of heavy metals by weight, with iron comprising 95% of this quantity. Light metals (~20%) and nonmetals (~75%) make up the other 95% of the crust.[131] Despite their overall scarcity, heavy metals can become concentrated in economically extractable quantities as a result of mountain building, erosion, or other geological processes.[143]

Heavy metals are found primarily as lithophiles (rock-loving) or chalcophiles (ore-loving). Lithophile heavy metals are mainly f-block elements and the more reactive of the d-block elements. They have a strong affinity for oxygen and mostly exist as relatively low density silicate minerals.[144] Chalcophile heavy metals are mainly the less reactive d-block elements, and period 4–6 p-block metals and metalloids. They are usually found in (insoluble) sulfide minerals. Being denser than the lithophiles, hence sinking lower into the crust at the time of its solidification, the chalcophiles tend to be less abundant than the lithophiles.[145]

In contrast, gold is a siderophile, or iron-loving element. It does not readily form compounds with either oxygen or sulfur.[146] At the time of the Earth's formation, and as the most noble (inert) of metals, gold sank into the core due to its tendency to form high-density metallic alloys. Consequently, it is a relatively rare metal.[147] Some other (less) noble heavy metals—molybdenum, rhenium, the platinum group metals (ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium, iridium, and platinum), germanium, and tin—can be counted as siderophiles but only in terms of their primary occurrence in the Earth (core, mantle and crust), rather the crust. These metals otherwise occur in the crust, in small quantities, chiefly as chalcophiles (less so in their native form).[148][n 22]

Concentrations of heavy metals below the crust are generally higher, with most being found in the largely iron-silicon-nickel core. Platinum, for example, comprises approximately 1 part per billion of the crust whereas its concentration in the core is thought to be nearly 6,000 times higher.[149][150] Recent speculation suggests that uranium (and thorium) in the core may generate a substantial amount of the heat that drives plate tectonics and (ultimately) sustains the Earth's magnetic field.[151][n 23]

Broadly speaking, and with some exceptions, lithophile heavy metals can be extracted from their ores by electrical or chemical treatments, while chalcophile heavy metals are obtained by roasting their sulphide ores to yield the corresponding oxides, and then heating these to obtain the raw metals.[153][n 24] Radium occurs in quantities too small to be economically mined and is instead obtained from spent nuclear fuels.[156] The chalcophile platinum group metals (PGM) mainly occur in small (mixed) quantities with other chalcophile ores. The ores involved need to be smelted, roasted, and then leached with sulfuric acid to produce a residue of PGM. This is chemically refined to obtain the individual metals in their pure forms.[157] Compared to other metals, PGM are expensive due to their scarcity[158] and high production costs.[159]

Gold, a siderophile, is most commonly recovered by dissolving the ores in which it is found in a cyanide solution.[160] The gold forms a dicyanoaurate(I), for example: 2 Au + H2O +½ O2 + 4 KCN → 2 K[Au(CN)2] + 2 KOH. Zinc is added to the mix and, being more reactive than gold, displaces the gold: 2 K[Au(CN)2] + Zn → K2[Zn(CN)4] + 2 Au. The gold precipitates out of solution as a sludge, and is filtered off and melted.[161]

Properties compared with light metals edit

Some general physical and chemical properties of light and heavy metals are summarised in the table. The comparison should be treated with caution since the terms light metal and heavy metal are not always consistently defined. Moreover, the physical properties of hardness and tensile strength can vary widely depending on purity, grain size and pre-treatment.[162]

Properties of light and heavy metals
Physical properties Light metals Heavy metals
Density Usually lower Usually higher
Hardness[163] Tend to be soft, easily cut or bent Most are quite hard
Thermal expansivity[164] Mostly higher Mostly lower
Melting point Mostly low[165] Low to very high[166]
Tensile strength[167] Mostly lower Mostly higher
Chemical properties Light metals Heavy metals
Periodic table location Most found in groups 1 and 2[168] Nearly all found in groups 3 through 16
Abundance in Earth's crust[131][169] More abundant Less abundant
Main occurrence (or source) Lithophiles[133] Lithophiles or chalcophiles (Au is a siderophile)
Reactivity[77][169] More reactive Less reactive
Sulfides Soluble to insoluble[n 25] Extremely insoluble[174]
Hydroxides Soluble to insoluble[n 26] Generally insoluble[178]
Salts[171] Mostly form colourless solutions in water Mostly form coloured solutions in water
Complexes Mostly colourless[179] Mostly coloured[180]
Biological role[181] Include macronutrients (Na, Mg, K, Ca) Include micronutrients (V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Mo)

These properties make it relatively easy to distinguish a light metal like sodium from a heavy metal like tungsten, but the differences become less clear at the boundaries. Light structural metals like beryllium, scandium, and titanium have some of the characteristics of heavy metals, such as higher melting points;[n 27] post-transition heavy metals like zinc, cadmium, and lead have some of the characteristics of light metals, such as being relatively soft, having lower melting points,[n 28] and forming mainly colourless complexes.[21][23][24]

Uses edit

Heavy metals are present in nearly all aspects of modern life. Iron may be the most common as it accounts for 90% of all refined metals. Platinum may be the most ubiquitous given it is said to be found in, or used to produce, 20% of all consumer goods.[186]

Some common uses of heavy metals depend on the general characteristics of metals such as electrical conductivity and reflectivity or the general characteristics of heavy metals such as density, strength, and durability. Other uses depend on the characteristics of the specific element, such as their biological role as nutrients or poisons or some other specific atomic properties. Examples of such atomic properties include: partly filled d- or f- orbitals (in many of the transition, lanthanide, and actinide heavy metals) that enable the formation of coloured compounds;[187] the capacity of most heavy metal ions (such as platinum,[188] cerium[189] or bismuth[190]) to exist in different oxidation states and therefore act as catalysts;[191] poorly overlapping 3d or 4f orbitals (in iron, cobalt, and nickel, or the lanthanide heavy metals from europium through thulium) that give rise to magnetic effects;[192] and high atomic numbers and electron densities that underpin their nuclear science applications.[193] Typical uses of heavy metals can be broadly grouped into the following six categories.[194][n 29]

Weight- or density-based edit

 
In a cello (example shown above) or a viola the C-string sometimes incorporates tungsten; its high density permits a smaller diameter string and improves responsiveness.[195]

Some uses of heavy metals, including in sport, mechanical engineering, military ordnance, and nuclear science, take advantage of their relatively high densities. In underwater diving, lead is used as a ballast;[196] in handicap horse racing each horse must carry a specified lead weight, based on factors including past performance, so as to equalize the chances of the various competitors.[197] In golf, tungsten, brass, or copper inserts in fairway clubs and irons lower the centre of gravity of the club making it easier to get the ball into the air;[198] and golf balls with tungsten cores are claimed to have better flight characteristics.[199] In fly fishing, sinking fly lines have a PVC coating embedded with tungsten powder, so that they sink at the required rate.[200] In track and field sport, steel balls used in the hammer throw and shot put events are filled with lead in order to attain the minimum weight required under international rules.[201] Tungsten was used in hammer throw balls at least up to 1980; the minimum size of the ball was increased in 1981 to eliminate the need for what was, at that time, an expensive metal (triple the cost of other hammers) not generally available in all countries.[202] Tungsten hammers were so dense that they penetrated too deeply into the turf.[203]

The higher the projectile density, the more effectively it can penetrate heavy armor plate ... Os, Ir, Pt, and Re ... are expensive ... U offers an appealing combination of high density, reasonable cost and high fracture toughness.

AM Russell and KL Lee
Structure–property relations
in nonferrous metals
(2005, p. 16)

In mechanical engineering, heavy metals are used for ballast in boats,[204] aeroplanes,[205] and motor vehicles;[206] or in balance weights on wheels and crankshafts,[207] gyroscopes, and propellers,[208] and centrifugal clutches,[209] in situations requiring maximum weight in minimum space (for example in watch movements).[205]

In military ordnance, tungsten or uranium is used in armour plating[210] and armour piercing projectiles,[211] as well as in nuclear weapons to increase efficiency (by reflecting neutrons and momentarily delaying the expansion of reacting materials).[212] In the 1970s, tantalum was found to be more effective than copper in shaped charge and explosively formed anti-armour weapons on account of its higher density, allowing greater force concentration, and better deformability.[213] Less-toxic heavy metals, such as copper, tin, tungsten, and bismuth, and probably manganese (as well as boron, a metalloid), have replaced lead and antimony in the green bullets used by some armies and in some recreational shooting munitions.[214] Doubts have been raised about the safety (or green credentials) of tungsten.[215]

Because denser materials absorb more radioactive emissions than lighter ones, heavy metals are useful for radiation shielding and to focus radiation beams in linear accelerators and radiotherapy applications.[216]

Strength- or durability-based edit

 
The Statue of Liberty. A stainless steel alloy[217] armature provides structural strength; a copper skin confers corrosion resistance.[n 30]

The strength or durability of heavy metals such as chromium, iron, nickel, copper, zinc, molybdenum, tin, tungsten, and lead, as well as their alloys, makes them useful for the manufacture of artefacts such as tools, machinery,[219] appliances,[220] utensils,[221] pipes,[220] railroad tracks,[222] buildings[223] and bridges,[224] automobiles,[220] locks,[225] furniture,[226] ships,[204] planes,[227] coinage[228] and jewellery.[229] They are also used as alloying additives for enhancing the properties of other metals.[n 31] Of the two dozen elements that have been used in the world's monetised coinage only two, carbon and aluminium, are not heavy metals.[231][n 32] Gold, silver, and platinum are used in jewellery[n 33] as are, for example, nickel, copper, indium, and cobalt in coloured gold.[234] Low-cost jewellery and children's toys may be made, to a significant degree, of heavy metals such as chromium, nickel, cadmium, or lead.[235]

Copper, zinc, tin, and lead are mechanically weaker metals but have useful corrosion prevention properties. While each of them will react with air, the resulting patinas of either various copper salts,[236] zinc carbonate, tin oxide, or a mixture of lead oxide, carbonate, and sulfate, confer valuable protective properties.[237] Copper and lead are therefore used, for example, as roofing materials;[238][n 34] zinc acts as an anti-corrosion agent in galvanised steel;[239] and tin serves a similar purpose on steel cans.[240]

The workability and corrosion resistance of iron and chromium are increased by adding gadolinium; the creep resistance of nickel is improved with the addition of thorium. Tellurium is added to copper (tellurium copper) and steel alloys to improve their machinability; and to lead to make it harder and more acid-resistant.[241]

Biological and chemical edit

 
Cerium(IV) oxide is used as a catalyst in self-cleaning ovens.[242]

The biocidal effects of some heavy metals have been known since antiquity.[243] Platinum, osmium, copper, ruthenium, and other heavy metals, including arsenic, are used in anti-cancer treatments, or have shown potential.[244] Antimony (anti-protozoal), bismuth (anti-ulcer), gold (anti-arthritic), and iron (anti-malarial) are also important in medicine.[245] Copper, zinc, silver, gold, or mercury are used in antiseptic formulations;[246] small amounts of some heavy metals are used to control algal growth in, for example, cooling towers.[247] Depending on their intended use as fertilisers or biocides, agrochemicals may contain heavy metals such as chromium, cobalt, nickel, copper, zinc, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, or lead.[248]

Selected heavy metals are used as catalysts in fuel processing (rhenium, for example), synthetic rubber and fibre production (bismuth), emission control devices (palladium), and in self-cleaning ovens (where cerium(IV) oxide in the walls of such ovens helps oxidise carbon-based cooking residues).[249] In soap chemistry, heavy metals form insoluble soaps that are used in lubricating greases, paint dryers, and fungicides (apart from lithium, the alkali metals and the ammonium ion form soluble soaps).[250]

Colouring and optics edit

 
Neodymium sulfate (Nd2(SO4)3), used to colour glassware[251]

The colours of glass, ceramic glazes, paints, pigments, and plastics are commonly produced by the inclusion of heavy metals (or their compounds) such as chromium, manganese, cobalt, copper, zinc, selenium, zirconium, molybdenum, silver, tin, praseodymium, neodymium, erbium, tungsten, iridium, gold, lead, or uranium.[252] Tattoo inks may contain heavy metals, such as chromium, cobalt, nickel, and copper.[253] The high reflectivity of some heavy metals is important in the construction of mirrors, including precision astronomical instruments. Headlight reflectors rely on the excellent reflectivity of a thin film of rhodium.[254]

Electronics, magnets, and lighting edit

 
The Topaz Solar Farm, in southern California, features nine million cadmium-tellurium photovoltaic modules covering an area of 25.6 square kilometres (9.9 square miles).

Heavy metals or their compounds can be found in electronic components, electrodes, and wiring and solar panels where they may be used as either conductors, semiconductors, or insulators. Molybdenum powder is used in circuit board inks.[255] Ruthenium(IV) oxide coated titanium anodes are used for the industrial production of chlorine.[256] Home electrical systems, for the most part, are wired with copper wire for its good conducting properties.[257] Silver and gold are used in electrical and electronic devices, particularly in contact switches, as a result of their high electrical conductivity and capacity to resist or minimise the formation of impurities on their surfaces.[258] The semiconductors cadmium telluride and gallium arsenide are used to make solar panels. Hafnium oxide, an insulator, is used as a voltage controller in microchips; tantalum oxide, another insulator, is used in capacitors in mobile phones.[259] Heavy metals have been used in batteries for over 200 years, at least since Volta invented his copper and silver voltaic pile in 1800.[260] Promethium, lanthanum, and mercury are further examples found in, respectively, atomic, nickel-metal hydride, and button cell batteries.[261]

Magnets are made of heavy metals such as manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel, niobium, bismuth, praseodymium, neodymium, gadolinium, and dysprosium. Neodymium magnets are the strongest type of permanent magnet commercially available. They are key components of, for example, car door locks, starter motors, fuel pumps, and power windows.[262]

Heavy metals are used in lighting, lasers, and light-emitting diodes (LEDs). Flat panel displays incorporate a thin film of electrically conducting indium tin oxide. Fluorescent lighting relies on mercury vapour for its operation. Ruby lasers generate deep red beams by exciting chromium atoms; the lanthanides are also extensively employed in lasers. Gallium, indium, and arsenic;[263] and copper, iridium, and platinum are used in LEDs (the latter three in organic LEDs).[264]

Nuclear edit

 
An X-ray tube with a rotating anode, typically a tungsten-rhenium alloy on a molybdenum core, backed with graphite[265][n 35]

Niche uses of heavy metals with high atomic numbers occur in diagnostic imaging, electron microscopy, and nuclear science. In diagnostic imaging, heavy metals such as cobalt or tungsten make up the anode materials found in x-ray tubes.[268] In electron microscopy, heavy metals such as lead, gold, palladium, platinum, or uranium are used to make conductive coatings and to introduce electron density into biological specimens by staining, negative staining, or vacuum deposition.[269] In nuclear science, nuclei of heavy metals such as chromium, iron, or zinc are sometimes fired at other heavy metal targets to produce superheavy elements;[270] heavy metals are also employed as spallation targets for the production of neutrons[271] or radioisotopes such as astatine (using lead, bismuth, thorium, or uranium in the latter case).[272]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Criteria used were density:[3] (1) above 3.5 g/cm3; (2) above 7 g/cm3; atomic weight: (3) > 22.98;[3] (4) > 40 (excluding s- and f-block metals);[4] (5) > 200;[5] atomic number: (6) > 20; (7) 21–92;[6] chemical behaviour: (8) United States Pharmacopeia;[7][8][9] (9) Hawkes' periodic table-based definition (excluding the lanthanides and actinides);[10] and (10) Nieboer and Richardson's biochemical classifications.[11] Densities of the elements are mainly from Emsley.[12] Predicted densities have been used for At, Fr and FmTs.[13] Indicative densities were derived for Fm, Md, No and Lr based on their atomic weights, estimated metallic radii,[14] and predicted close-packed crystalline structures.[15] Atomic weights are from Emsley,[12] inside back cover
  2. ^ Metalloids were, however, excluded from Hawkes' periodic table-based definition given he noted it was "not necessary to decide whether semimetals [i.e. metalloids] should be included as heavy metals."[10]
  3. ^ The test is not specific for any particular metals but is said to be capable of at least detecting Mo, Cu, Ag, Cd, Hg, Sn, Pb, As, Sb, and Bi.[8] In any event, when the test uses hydrogen sulfide as the reagent it cannot detect Th, Ti, Zr, Nb, Ta, or Cr.[9]
  4. ^ Transition and post-transition metals that do not usually form coloured complexes are Sc and Y in group 3;[21] Ag in group 11;[22] Zn and Cd in group 12;[21][23] and the metals of groups 1316.[24]
  5. ^ Lanthanide (Ln) sulfides and hydroxides are insoluble;[25] the latter can be obtained from aqueous solutions of Ln salts as coloured gelatinous precipitates;[26] and Ln complexes have much the same colour as their aqua ions (the majority of which are coloured).[27] Actinide (An) sulfides may or may not be insoluble, depending on the author. Divalent uranium monosulfide is not attacked by boiling water.[28] Trivalent actinide ions behave similarly to the trivalent lanthanide ions hence the sulfides in question may be insoluble but this is not explicitly stated.[29] Tervalent An sulfides decompose[30] but Edelstein et al. say they are soluble[31] whereas Haynes says thorium(IV) sulfide is insoluble.[32] Early in the history of nuclear fission it had been noted that precipitation with hydrogen sulfide was a "remarkably" effective way of isolating and detecting transuranium elements in solution.[33] In a similar vein, Deschlag writes that the elements after uranium were expected to have insoluble sulfides by analogy with third row transition metals. But he goes on to note that the elements after actinium were found to have properties different from those of the transition metals and claims they do not form insoluble sulfides.[34] The An hydroxides are, however, insoluble[31] and can be precipitated from aqueous solutions of their salts.[35] Finally, many An complexes have "deep and vivid" colours.[36]
  6. ^ The heavier elements commonly to less commonly recognised as metalloidsGe; As, Sb; Se, Te, Po; At—satisfy some of the three parts of Hawkes' definition. All of them have insoluble sulfides[35][37] but only Ge, Te, and Po apparently have effectively insoluble hydroxides.[38] All bar At can be obtained as coloured (sulfide) precipitates from aqueous solutions of their salts;[35] astatine is likewise precipitated from solution by hydrogen sulfide but, since visible quantities of At have never been synthesised, the colour of the precipitate is not known.[37][39] As p-block elements, their complexes are usually colourless.[40]
  7. ^ The class A and class B terminology is analogous to the "hard acid" and "soft base" terminology sometimes used to refer to the behaviour of metal ions in inorganic systems.[42]
  8. ^ Be and Al are exceptions to this general trend. They have somewhat higher electronegativity values.[43] Being relatively small their +2 or +3 ions have high charge densities, thereby polarising nearby electron clouds. The net result is that Be and Al compounds have considerable covalent character.[44]
  9. ^ If Gmelin had been working with the imperial system of weights and measures he may have chosen 300 lb/ft3 as his light/heavy metal cutoff in which case selenium (density 300.27 lb/ft3) would have made the grade, whereas 5 g/cm3 = 312.14 lb/ft3.
  10. ^ Lead, a cumulative poison, has a relatively high abundance due to its extensive historical use and human-caused discharge into the environment.[79]
  11. ^ Haynes shows an amount of < 17 mg for tin[80]
  12. ^ Iyengar records a figure of 5 mg for nickel;[81] Haynes shows an amount of 10 mg[80]
  13. ^ Selenium is a nonmetal.
  14. ^ Encompassing 45 heavy metals occurring in quantities of less than 10 mg each, including As (7 mg), Mo (5), Co (1.5), and Cr (1.4)[82]
  15. ^ Of the elements commonly recognised as metalloids, B and Si were counted as nonmetals; Ge, As, Sb, and Te as heavy metals.
  16. ^ Ni, Cu, Zn, Se, Ag and Sb appear in the United States Government's Toxic Pollutant List;[108] Mn, Co, and Sn are listed in the Australian Government's National Pollutant Inventory.[109]
  17. ^ Tungsten could be another such toxic heavy metal.[110]
  18. ^ Selenium is the most toxic of the heavy metals that are essential for mammals.[114]
  19. ^ Trace elements having an abundance much less than the one part per trillion of Ra and Pa (namely Tc, Pm, Po, At, Ac, Np, and Pu) are not shown. Abundances are from Lide[131] and Emsley;[132] occurrence types are from McQueen.[133]
  20. ^ In some cases, for example in the presence of high energy gamma rays or in a very high temperature hydrogen rich environment, the subject nuclei may experience neutron loss or proton gain resulting in the production of (comparatively rare) neutron deficient isotopes.[138]
  21. ^ The ejection of matter when two neutron stars collide is attributed to the interaction of their tidal forces, possible crustal disruption, and shock heating (which is what happens if you floor the accelerator in a car when the engine is cold).[141]
  22. ^ Iron, cobalt, nickel, germanium and tin are also siderophiles from a whole of Earth perspective.[133]
  23. ^ Heat escaping from the inner solid core is believed to generate motion in the outer core, which is made of liquid iron alloys. The motion of this liquid generates electrical currents which give rise to a magnetic field.[152]
  24. ^ Heavy metals that occur naturally in quantities too small to be economically mined (Tc, Pm, Po, At, Ac, Np and Pu) are instead produced by artificial transmutation.[154] The latter method is also used to produce heavy metals from americium onwards.[155]
  25. ^ Sulfides of the Group 1 and 2 metals, and aluminium, are hydrolysed by water;[170] scandium,[171] yttrium[172] and titanium sulfides[173] are insoluble.
  26. ^ For example, the hydroxides of potassium, rubidium, and caesium have solubilities exceeding 100 grams per 100 grams of water[175] whereas those of aluminium (0.0001)[176] and scandium (<0.000 000 15 grams)[177] are regarded as being insoluble.
  27. ^ Beryllium has what is described as a "high" melting point of 1560 K; scandium and titanium melt at 1814 and 1941 K.[182]
  28. ^ Zinc is a soft metal with a Moh's hardness of 2.5;[183] cadmium and lead have lower hardness ratings of 2.0 and 1.5.[184] Zinc has a "low" melting point of 693 K; cadmium and lead melt at 595 and 601 K.[185]
  29. ^ Some violence and abstraction of detail was applied to the sorting scheme in order to keep the number of categories to a manageable level.
  30. ^ The skin has largely turned green due to the formation of a protective patina composed of antlerite Cu3(OH)4SO4, atacamite Cu4(OH)6Cl2, brochantite Cu4(OH)6SO4, cuprous oxide Cu2O, and tenorite CuO.[218]
  31. ^ For the lanthanides, this is their only structural use as they are otherwise too reactive, relatively expensive, and moderately strong at best.[230]
  32. ^ Welter[232] classifies coinage metals as precious metals (e.g., silver, gold, platinum); heavy metals of very high durability (nickel); heavy metals of low durability (copper, iron, zinc, tin, and lead); and light metals (aluminium).
  33. ^ Emsley[233] estimates a global loss of six tonnes of gold a year due to 18-carat wedding rings slowly wearing away.
  34. ^ Sheet lead exposed to the rigours of industrial and coastal climates will last for centuries[196]
  35. ^ Electrons impacting the tungsten anode generate X-rays;[266] rhenium gives tungsten better resistance to thermal shock;[267] molybdenum and graphite act as heat sinks. Molybdenum also has a density nearly half that of tungsten thereby reducing the weight of the anode.[265]

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heavy, metals, this, article, about, chemical, elements, other, uses, heavy, metal, disambiguation, generally, defined, metals, with, relatively, high, densities, atomic, weights, atomic, numbers, criteria, used, whether, metalloids, included, vary, depending,. This article is about chemical elements For other uses see Heavy metal disambiguation Heavy metals are generally defined as metals with relatively high densities atomic weights or atomic numbers The criteria used and whether metalloids are included vary depending on the author and context 2 In metallurgy for example a heavy metal may be defined on the basis of density whereas in physics the distinguishing criterion might be atomic number while a chemist would likely be more concerned with chemical behaviour More specific definitions have been published none of which have been widely accepted The definitions surveyed in this article encompass up to 96 out of the 118 known chemical elements only mercury lead and bismuth meet all of them Despite this lack of agreement the term plural or singular is widely used in science A density of more than 5 g cm3 is sometimes quoted as a commonly used criterion and is used in the body of this article Crystals of osmium a heavy metal nearly twice as dense as lead 1 The earliest known metals common metals such as iron copper and tin and precious metals such as silver gold and platinum are heavy metals From 1809 onward light metals such as magnesium aluminium and titanium were discovered as well as less well known heavy metals including gallium thallium and hafnium Some heavy metals are either essential nutrients typically iron cobalt and zinc or relatively harmless such as ruthenium silver and indium but can be toxic in larger amounts or certain forms Other heavy metals such as arsenic cadmium mercury and lead are highly poisonous Potential sources of heavy metal poisoning include mining tailings smelting industrial waste agricultural runoff occupational exposure paints and treated timber Physical and chemical characterisations of heavy metals need to be treated with caution as the metals involved are not always consistently defined As well as being relatively dense heavy metals tend to be less reactive than lighter metals and have far fewer soluble sulfides and hydroxides While it is relatively easy to distinguish a heavy metal such as tungsten from a lighter metal such as sodium a few heavy metals such as zinc mercury and lead have some of the characteristics of lighter metals and lighter metals such as beryllium scandium and titanium have some of the characteristics of heavier metals Heavy metals are relatively scarce in the Earth s crust but are present in many aspects of modern life They are used in for example golf clubs cars antiseptics self cleaning ovens plastics solar panels mobile phones and particle accelerators Contents 1 Definitions 1 1 List of heavy metals based on density 2 Origins and use of the term 2 1 Criticism 2 2 Popularity 3 Biological role 4 Toxicity 4 1 Environmental heavy metals 4 2 Nutritionally essential heavy metals 4 3 Other heavy metals 4 4 Exposure sources 5 Formation abundance occurrence and extraction 6 Properties compared with light metals 7 Uses 7 1 Weight or density based 7 2 Strength or durability based 7 3 Biological and chemical 7 4 Colouring and optics 7 5 Electronics magnets and lighting 7 6 Nuclear 8 Notes 9 Sources 9 1 Citations 9 2 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksDefinitions editHeat map of heavy metals in the periodic table1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 181 H He2 Li Be B C N O F Ne3 Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar4 K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr5 Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe6 Cs Ba nbsp Lu Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn7 Fr Ra nbsp Lr Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Cn Nh Fl Mc Lv Ts Og nbsp La Ce Pr Nd Pm Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb nbsp Ac Th Pa U Np Pu Am Cm Bk Cf Es Fm Md No Number of criteria met Number of elements 103 95 814 6 756 4 514 1 34 03 nonmetals19This table shows the number of heavy metal criteria met by each metal out of the ten criteria listed in this section i e two based on density three on atomic weight two on atomic number and three on chemical behaviour n 1 It illustrates the lack of agreement surrounding the concept with the possible exception of mercury lead and bismuth Six elements near the end of periods rows 4 to 7 sometimes considered metalloids are treated here as metals they are germanium Ge arsenic As selenium Se antimony Sb tellurium Te and astatine At 16 n 2 Oganesson Og is treated as a nonmetal Metals enclosed by a dashed line have or for At and Fm Ts are predicted to have densities of more than 5 g cm3 There is no widely agreed criterion based definition of a heavy metal Different meanings may be attached to the term depending on the context In metallurgy for example a heavy metal may be defined on the basis of density 17 whereas in physics the distinguishing criterion might be atomic number 18 and a chemist or biologist would likely be more concerned with chemical behaviour 10 Density criteria range from above 3 5 g cm3 to above 7 g cm3 3 Atomic weight definitions can range from greater than sodium atomic weight 22 98 3 greater than 40 excluding s and f block metals hence starting with scandium 4 or more than 200 i e from mercury onwards 5 Atomic numbers of heavy metals are generally given as greater than 20 calcium 3 sometimes this is capped at 92 uranium 6 Definitions based on atomic number have been criticised for including metals with low densities For example rubidium in group column 1 of the periodic table has an atomic number of 37 but a density of only 1 532 g cm3 which is below the threshold figure used by other authors 19 The same problem may occur with definitions which are based on atomic weight 20 The United States Pharmacopeia includes a test for heavy metals that involves precipitating metallic impurities as their coloured sulfides 7 n 3 In 1997 Stephen Hawkes a chemistry professor writing in the context of fifty years experience with the term said it applied to metals with insoluble sulfides and hydroxides whose salts produce colored solutions in water and whose complexes are usually colored On the basis of the metals he had seen referred to as heavy metals he suggested it would be useful to define them as in general all the metals in periodic table columns 3 to 16 that are in row 4 or greater in other words the transition metals and post transition metals 10 n 4 The lanthanides satisfy Hawkes three part description the status of the actinides is not completely settled n 5 n 6 In biochemistry heavy metals are sometimes defined on the basis of the Lewis acid electronic pair acceptor behaviour of their ions in aqueous solution as class B and borderline metals 41 In this scheme class A metal ions prefer oxygen donors class B ions prefer nitrogen or sulfur donors and borderline or ambivalent ions show either class A or B characteristics depending on the circumstances n 7 Class A metals which tend to have low electronegativity and form bonds with large ionic character are the alkali and alkaline earths aluminium the group 3 metals and the lanthanides and actinides n 8 Class B metals which tend to have higher electronegativity and form bonds with considerable covalent character are mainly the heavier transition and post transition metals Borderline metals largely comprise the lighter transition and post transition metals plus arsenic and antimony The distinction between the class A metals and the other two categories is sharp 45 A frequently cited proposal 46 to use these classification categories instead of the more evocative 11 name heavy metal has not been widely adopted 47 List of heavy metals based on density edit A density of more than 5 g cm3 is sometimes mentioned as a common heavy metal defining factor 48 and in the absence of a unanimous definition is used to populate this list and unless otherwise stated guide the remainder of the article Metalloids meeting the applicable criteria arsenic and antimony for example are sometimes counted as heavy metals particularly in environmental chemistry 49 as is the case here Selenium density 4 8 g cm3 50 is also included in the list though it falls marginally short of the density criterion and is less commonly recognised as a metalloid 16 but has a waterborne chemistry similar in some respects to that of arsenic and antimony 51 Other metals sometimes classified or treated as heavy metals such as beryllium 52 density 1 8 g cm3 53 aluminium 52 2 7 g cm3 54 calcium 55 1 55 g cm3 56 and barium 55 3 6 g cm3 57 are here treated as light metals and in general are not further considered Produced mainly by commercial mining informally classified by economic significance Strategic 30 Hydrogen 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 Considered vital to multiple nations strategic interests 58 These 30 include 22 listed here and8 below 6 precious amp 2 commodity Antimony CeriumDysprosiumErbiumEuropiumGadoliniumGalliumGermanium HolmiumIndiumLanthanumLutetiumNeodymiumNiobiumPraseodymiumSamariumTantalumTerbiumThuliumTungstenUranium YtterbiumPrecious 8 Hydrogen 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 Rare and costly 59 Strategic IridiumOsmiumPalladiumPlatinumRhodiumRuthenium Non strategic GoldSilver Commodity 9 Hydrogen 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 Traded by the tonne on the LME Strategic ChromiumCobalt Non strategic CopperIronLeadMolybdenumNickelTinZincMinor 14 Hydrogen 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 Neither strategic precious nor commodity Arsenic BismuthCadmiumHafniumManganeseMercuryRheniumSelenium Tellurium ThalliumThorium VanadiumZirconiumProduced mainly by artificial transmutation informally classified by stability Long lived 14 Hydrogen 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 Half life greater than 1 day Actinium Americium Berkelium Californium Curium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Neptunium Plutonium Polonium Protactinium Promethium Radium Technetium Ephemeral 17 Hydrogen 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 Half life less than 1 day Astatine Bohrium Copernicium Darmstadtium Dubnium Flerovium Hassium Lawrencium Livermorium Meitnerium Moscovium Nihonium Nobelium Roentgenium Rutherfordium Seaborgium Tennessine Antimony arsenic germanium and tellurium are commonly recognised as metalloids selenium less commonly so 16 Astatine is predicted to be a metal 60 All isotopes of these 34 elements are unstable and hence radioactive While this is also true of bismuth it is not so marked since its half life of 19 billion billion years is over a billion times the 13 8 billion year estimated age of the universe 61 62 These nine elements do occur naturally but in amounts too small for economically viable extraction 63 Origins and use of the term editThe heaviness of naturally occurring metals such as gold copper and iron may have been noticed in prehistory and in light of their malleability led to the first attempts to craft metal ornaments tools and weapons 64 All metals discovered from then until 1809 had relatively high densities their heaviness was regarded as a singularly distinguishing criterion 65 From 1809 onwards light metals such as sodium potassium and strontium were isolated Their low densities challenged conventional wisdom and it was proposed to refer to them as metalloids meaning resembling metals in form or appearance 66 This suggestion was ignored the new elements came to be recognised as metals and the term metalloid was then used to refer to nonmetallic elements and later elements that were hard to describe as either metals or nonmetals 67 An early use of the term heavy metal dates from 1817 when the German chemist Leopold Gmelin divided the elements into nonmetals light metals and heavy metals 68 Light metals had densities of 0 860 5 0 g cm3 heavy metals 5 308 22 000 69 n 9 The term later became associated with elements of high atomic weight or high atomic number 19 It is sometimes used interchangeably with the term heavy element For example in discussing the history of nuclear chemistry Magee 70 notes that the actinides were once thought to represent a new heavy element transition group whereas Seaborg and co workers favoured a heavy metal rare earth like series In astronomy however a heavy element is any element heavier than hydrogen and helium 71 Criticism edit In 2002 Scottish toxicologist John Duffus reviewed the definitions used over the previous 60 years and concluded they were so diverse as to effectively render the term meaningless 72 Along with this finding the heavy metal status of some metals is occasionally challenged on the grounds that they are too light or are involved in biological processes or rarely constitute environmental hazards Examples include scandium too light 19 73 vanadium to zinc biological processes 74 and rhodium indium and osmium too rare 75 Popularity edit Despite its questionable meaning the term heavy metal appears regularly in scientific literature A 2010 study found that it had been increasingly used and seemed to have become part of the language of science 76 It is said to be an acceptable term given its convenience and familiarity as long as it is accompanied by a strict definition 41 The counterparts to the heavy metals the light metals are alluded to by The Minerals Metals and Materials Society as including aluminium magnesium beryllium titanium lithium and other reactive metals 77 Biological role editAmount of heavy metals inan average 70 kg human body Element Milligrams 78 Iron 4000 4000 Zinc 2500 2500 Lead n 10 120 120 Copper 70 70 Tin n 11 30 30 Vanadium 20 20 Cadmium 20 20 Nickel n 12 15 15 Selenium n 13 14 14 Manganese 12 12 Other n 14 200 200 Total 7000See also Essential trace element Trace amounts of some heavy metals mostly in period 4 are required for certain biological processes These are iron and copper oxygen and electron transport cobalt complex syntheses and cell metabolism zinc hydroxylation 83 vanadium and manganese enzyme regulation or functioning chromium glucose utilisation nickel cell growth arsenic metabolic growth in some animals and possibly in humans and selenium antioxidant functioning and hormone production 84 Periods 5 and 6 contain fewer essential heavy metals consistent with the general pattern that heavier elements tend to be less abundant and that scarcer elements are less likely to be nutritionally essential 85 In period 5 molybdenum is required for the catalysis of redox reactions cadmium is used by some marine diatoms for the same purpose and tin may be required for growth in a few species 86 In period 6 tungsten is required by some archaea and bacteria for metabolic processes 87 A deficiency of any of these period 4 6 essential heavy metals may increase susceptibility to heavy metal poisoning 88 conversely an excess may also have adverse biological effects An average 70 kg human body is about 0 01 heavy metals 7 g equivalent to the weight of two dried peas with iron at 4 g zinc at 2 5 g and lead at 0 12 g comprising the three main constituents 2 light metals 1 4 kg the weight of a bottle of wine and nearly 98 nonmetals mostly water 89 n 15 A few non essential heavy metals have been observed to have biological effects Gallium germanium a metalloid indium and most lanthanides can stimulate metabolism and titanium promotes growth in plants 90 though it is not always considered a heavy metal Toxicity editThe focus of this section is mainly the more serious toxic effects of heavy metals including cancer brain damage and death rather than the harm they may cause to one or more of the skin lungs stomach kidneys liver or heart For more specific information see Metal toxicity Toxic heavy metal or articles on individual elements or compounds Heavy metals are often assumed to be highly toxic or damaging to the environment 91 Some are while certain others are toxic only if taken in excess or encountered in certain forms Inhalation of certain metals either as fine dust or most commonly as fumes can also result in a condition called metal fume fever Environmental heavy metals edit Chromium arsenic cadmium mercury and lead have the greatest potential to cause harm on account of their extensive use the toxicity of some of their combined or elemental forms and their widespread distribution in the environment 92 Hexavalent chromium for example is highly toxic as are mercury vapour and many mercury compounds 93 These five elements have a strong affinity for sulfur in the human body they usually bind via thiol groups SH to enzymes responsible for controlling the speed of metabolic reactions The resulting sulfur metal bonds inhibit the proper functioning of the enzymes involved human health deteriorates sometimes fatally 94 Chromium in its hexavalent form and arsenic are carcinogens cadmium causes a degenerative bone disease and mercury and lead damage the central nervous system nbsp Chromium crystalsand 1 cm3 cube nbsp Arsenic sealed in acontainer to stop tarnishing nbsp Cadmium barand 1 cm3 cube nbsp Mercury beingpoured into a petri dish nbsp Oxidised leadnodules and 1 cm3 cubeLead is the most prevalent heavy metal contaminant 95 Levels in the aquatic environments of industrialised societies have been estimated to be two to three times those of pre industrial levels 96 As a component of tetraethyl lead CH3 CH2 4 Pb it was used extensively in gasoline from the 1930s until the 1970s 97 Although the use of leaded gasoline was largely phased out in North America by 1996 soils next to roads built before this time retain high lead concentrations 98 Later research demonstrated a statistically significant correlation between the usage rate of leaded gasoline and violent crime in the United States taking into account a 22 year time lag for the average age of violent criminals the violent crime curve virtually tracked the lead exposure curve 99 Other heavy metals noted for their potentially hazardous nature usually as toxic environmental pollutants include manganese central nervous system damage 100 cobalt and nickel carcinogens 101 copper 102 zinc 103 selenium 104 and silver 105 endocrine disruption congenital disorders or general toxic effects in fish plants birds or other aquatic organisms tin as organotin central nervous system damage 106 antimony a suspected carcinogen 107 and thallium central nervous system damage 102 n 16 n 17 Nutritionally essential heavy metals edit Heavy metals essential for life can be toxic if taken in excess some have notably toxic forms Vanadium pentoxide V2O5 is carcinogenic in animals and when inhaled causes DNA damage 102 The purple permanganate ion MnO 4 is a liver and kidney poison 111 Ingesting more than 0 5 grams of iron can induce cardiac collapse such overdoses most commonly occur in children and may result in death within 24 hours 102 Nickel carbonyl Ni CO 4 at 30 parts per million can cause respiratory failure brain damage and death 102 Imbibing a gram or more of copper sulfate CuSO4 can be fatal survivors may be left with major organ damage 112 More than five milligrams of selenium is highly toxic this is roughly ten times the 0 45 milligram recommended maximum daily intake 113 long term poisoning can have paralytic effects 102 n 18 Other heavy metals edit A few other non essential heavy metals have one or more toxic forms Kidney failure and fatalities have been recorded arising from the ingestion of germanium dietary supplements 15 to 300 g in total consumed over a period of two months to three years 102 Exposure to osmium tetroxide OsO4 may cause permanent eye damage and can lead to respiratory failure 115 and death 116 Indium salts are toxic if more than few milligrams are ingested and will affect the kidneys liver and heart 117 Cisplatin PtCl2 NH3 2 an important drug used to kill cancer cells is also a kidney and nerve poison 102 Bismuth compounds can cause liver damage if taken in excess insoluble uranium compounds as well as the dangerous radiation they emit can cause permanent kidney damage 118 Exposure sources edit See also Cement Heavy metal emissions in the air Heavy metals can degrade air water and soil quality and subsequently cause health issues in plants animals and people when they become concentrated as a result of industrial activities 119 120 Common sources of heavy metals in this context include mining smelting and industrial wastes vehicle emissions motor oil 121 fuels used by ships and heavy machineries construction works fertilisers 122 pesticides paints dyes and pigments renovation illegal depositing of construction and demolition waste open top roll off dumpster welding brazing and soldering glassworking 123 concrete works roadworks use of recycled materials DIY Metal Projects incinerators 124 burning of joss paper open burning of waste in rural areas contaminated ventilation system food contaminated by the environment or by the packaging armaments lead acid batteries electronic waste recycling yard and treated timber 125 aging water supply infrastructure 126 and microplastics floating in the world s oceans 127 Recent examples of heavy metal contamination and health risks include the occurrence of Minamata disease in Japan 1932 1968 lawsuits ongoing as of 2016 128 the Bento Rodrigues dam disaster in Brazil 129 high levels of lead in drinking water supplied to the residents of Flint Michigan in the north east of the United States 130 and 2015 Hong Kong heavy metal in drinking water incidents Formation abundance occurrence and extraction editSee also Nucleosynthesis and Abundance of the chemical elements Heavy metals in the Earth s crust abundance and main occurrence or source n 19 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 181 H He2 Li Be B C N O F Ne3 Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar4 K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr5 Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe6 Cs Ba nbsp Lu Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi7 Ra nbsp nbsp La Ce Pr Nd Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb nbsp Th Pa U Most abundant 56 300 ppm by weight Rare 0 01 0 99 ppm Abundant 100 999 ppm Very rare 0 0001 0 0099 ppm Uncommon 1 99 ppm Least abundant 0 000001 ppm Heavy metals left of the dividing line occur or are sourced mainly as lithophiles those to the right as chalcophiles except gold a siderophile and tin a lithophile Heavy metals up to the vicinity of iron in the periodic table are largely made via stellar nucleosynthesis In this process lighter elements from hydrogen to silicon undergo successive fusion reactions inside stars releasing light and heat and forming heavier elements with higher atomic numbers 134 Heavier heavy metals are not usually formed this way since fusion reactions involving such nuclei would consume rather than release energy 135 Rather they are largely synthesised from elements with a lower atomic number by neutron capture with the two main modes of this repetitive capture being the s process and the r process In the s process s stands for slow singular captures are separated by years or decades allowing the less stable nuclei to beta decay 136 while in the r process rapid captures happen faster than nuclei can decay Therefore the s process takes a more or less clear path for example stable cadmium 110 nuclei are successively bombarded by free neutrons inside a star until they form cadmium 115 nuclei which are unstable and decay to form indium 115 which is nearly stable with a half life 30 000 times the age of the universe These nuclei capture neutrons and form indium 116 which is unstable and decays to form tin 116 and so on 134 137 n 20 In contrast there is no such path in the r process The s process stops at bismuth due to the short half lives of the next two elements polonium and astatine which decay to bismuth or lead The r process is so fast it can skip this zone of instability and go on to create heavier elements such as thorium and uranium 139 Heavy metals condense in planets as a result of stellar evolution and destruction processes Stars lose much of their mass when it is ejected late in their lifetimes and sometimes thereafter as a result of a neutron star merger 140 n 21 thereby increasing the abundance of elements heavier than helium in the interstellar medium When gravitational attraction causes this matter to coalesce and collapse new stars and planets are formed 142 The Earth s crust is made of approximately 5 of heavy metals by weight with iron comprising 95 of this quantity Light metals 20 and nonmetals 75 make up the other 95 of the crust 131 Despite their overall scarcity heavy metals can become concentrated in economically extractable quantities as a result of mountain building erosion or other geological processes 143 Heavy metals are found primarily as lithophiles rock loving or chalcophiles ore loving Lithophile heavy metals are mainly f block elements and the more reactive of the d block elements They have a strong affinity for oxygen and mostly exist as relatively low density silicate minerals 144 Chalcophile heavy metals are mainly the less reactive d block elements and period 4 6 p block metals and metalloids They are usually found in insoluble sulfide minerals Being denser than the lithophiles hence sinking lower into the crust at the time of its solidification the chalcophiles tend to be less abundant than the lithophiles 145 In contrast gold is a siderophile or iron loving element It does not readily form compounds with either oxygen or sulfur 146 At the time of the Earth s formation and as the most noble inert of metals gold sank into the core due to its tendency to form high density metallic alloys Consequently it is a relatively rare metal 147 Some other less noble heavy metals molybdenum rhenium the platinum group metals ruthenium rhodium palladium osmium iridium and platinum germanium and tin can be counted as siderophiles but only in terms of their primary occurrence in the Earth core mantle and crust rather the crust These metals otherwise occur in the crust in small quantities chiefly as chalcophiles less so in their native form 148 n 22 Concentrations of heavy metals below the crust are generally higher with most being found in the largely iron silicon nickel core Platinum for example comprises approximately 1 part per billion of the crust whereas its concentration in the core is thought to be nearly 6 000 times higher 149 150 Recent speculation suggests that uranium and thorium in the core may generate a substantial amount of the heat that drives plate tectonics and ultimately sustains the Earth s magnetic field 151 n 23 Broadly speaking and with some exceptions lithophile heavy metals can be extracted from their ores by electrical or chemical treatments while chalcophile heavy metals are obtained by roasting their sulphide ores to yield the corresponding oxides and then heating these to obtain the raw metals 153 n 24 Radium occurs in quantities too small to be economically mined and is instead obtained from spent nuclear fuels 156 The chalcophile platinum group metals PGM mainly occur in small mixed quantities with other chalcophile ores The ores involved need to be smelted roasted and then leached with sulfuric acid to produce a residue of PGM This is chemically refined to obtain the individual metals in their pure forms 157 Compared to other metals PGM are expensive due to their scarcity 158 and high production costs 159 Gold a siderophile is most commonly recovered by dissolving the ores in which it is found in a cyanide solution 160 The gold forms a dicyanoaurate I for example 2 Au H2O O2 4 KCN 2 K Au CN 2 2 KOH Zinc is added to the mix and being more reactive than gold displaces the gold 2 K Au CN 2 Zn K2 Zn CN 4 2 Au The gold precipitates out of solution as a sludge and is filtered off and melted 161 Properties compared with light metals editSome general physical and chemical properties of light and heavy metals are summarised in the table The comparison should be treated with caution since the terms light metal and heavy metal are not always consistently defined Moreover the physical properties of hardness and tensile strength can vary widely depending on purity grain size and pre treatment 162 Properties of light and heavy metals Physical properties Light metals Heavy metalsDensity Usually lower Usually higherHardness 163 Tend to be soft easily cut or bent Most are quite hardThermal expansivity 164 Mostly higher Mostly lowerMelting point Mostly low 165 Low to very high 166 Tensile strength 167 Mostly lower Mostly higherChemical properties Light metals Heavy metalsPeriodic table location Most found in groups 1 and 2 168 Nearly all found in groups 3 through 16Abundance in Earth s crust 131 169 More abundant Less abundantMain occurrence or source Lithophiles 133 Lithophiles or chalcophiles Au is a siderophile Reactivity 77 169 More reactive Less reactiveSulfides Soluble to insoluble n 25 Extremely insoluble 174 Hydroxides Soluble to insoluble n 26 Generally insoluble 178 Salts 171 Mostly form colourless solutions in water Mostly form coloured solutions in waterComplexes Mostly colourless 179 Mostly coloured 180 Biological role 181 Include macronutrients Na Mg K Ca Include micronutrients V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Mo These properties make it relatively easy to distinguish a light metal like sodium from a heavy metal like tungsten but the differences become less clear at the boundaries Light structural metals like beryllium scandium and titanium have some of the characteristics of heavy metals such as higher melting points n 27 post transition heavy metals like zinc cadmium and lead have some of the characteristics of light metals such as being relatively soft having lower melting points n 28 and forming mainly colourless complexes 21 23 24 Uses editHeavy metals are present in nearly all aspects of modern life Iron may be the most common as it accounts for 90 of all refined metals Platinum may be the most ubiquitous given it is said to be found in or used to produce 20 of all consumer goods 186 Some common uses of heavy metals depend on the general characteristics of metals such as electrical conductivity and reflectivity or the general characteristics of heavy metals such as density strength and durability Other uses depend on the characteristics of the specific element such as their biological role as nutrients or poisons or some other specific atomic properties Examples of such atomic properties include partly filled d or f orbitals in many of the transition lanthanide and actinide heavy metals that enable the formation of coloured compounds 187 the capacity of most heavy metal ions such as platinum 188 cerium 189 or bismuth 190 to exist in different oxidation states and therefore act as catalysts 191 poorly overlapping 3d or 4f orbitals in iron cobalt and nickel or the lanthanide heavy metals from europium through thulium that give rise to magnetic effects 192 and high atomic numbers and electron densities that underpin their nuclear science applications 193 Typical uses of heavy metals can be broadly grouped into the following six categories 194 n 29 Weight or density based edit nbsp In a cello example shown above or a viola the C string sometimes incorporates tungsten its high density permits a smaller diameter string and improves responsiveness 195 Some uses of heavy metals including in sport mechanical engineering military ordnance and nuclear science take advantage of their relatively high densities In underwater diving lead is used as a ballast 196 in handicap horse racing each horse must carry a specified lead weight based on factors including past performance so as to equalize the chances of the various competitors 197 In golf tungsten brass or copper inserts in fairway clubs and irons lower the centre of gravity of the club making it easier to get the ball into the air 198 and golf balls with tungsten cores are claimed to have better flight characteristics 199 In fly fishing sinking fly lines have a PVC coating embedded with tungsten powder so that they sink at the required rate 200 In track and field sport steel balls used in the hammer throw and shot put events are filled with lead in order to attain the minimum weight required under international rules 201 Tungsten was used in hammer throw balls at least up to 1980 the minimum size of the ball was increased in 1981 to eliminate the need for what was at that time an expensive metal triple the cost of other hammers not generally available in all countries 202 Tungsten hammers were so dense that they penetrated too deeply into the turf 203 The higher the projectile density the more effectively it can penetrate heavy armor plate Os Ir Pt and Re are expensive U offers an appealing combination of high density reasonable cost and high fracture toughness AM Russell and KL LeeStructure property relationsin nonferrous metals 2005 p 16 In mechanical engineering heavy metals are used for ballast in boats 204 aeroplanes 205 and motor vehicles 206 or in balance weights on wheels and crankshafts 207 gyroscopes and propellers 208 and centrifugal clutches 209 in situations requiring maximum weight in minimum space for example in watch movements 205 In military ordnance tungsten or uranium is used in armour plating 210 and armour piercing projectiles 211 as well as in nuclear weapons to increase efficiency by reflecting neutrons and momentarily delaying the expansion of reacting materials 212 In the 1970s tantalum was found to be more effective than copper in shaped charge and explosively formed anti armour weapons on account of its higher density allowing greater force concentration and better deformability 213 Less toxic heavy metals such as copper tin tungsten and bismuth and probably manganese as well as boron a metalloid have replaced lead and antimony in the green bullets used by some armies and in some recreational shooting munitions 214 Doubts have been raised about the safety or green credentials of tungsten 215 Because denser materials absorb more radioactive emissions than lighter ones heavy metals are useful for radiation shielding and to focus radiation beams in linear accelerators and radiotherapy applications 216 Strength or durability based edit nbsp The Statue of Liberty A stainless steel alloy 217 armature provides structural strength a copper skin confers corrosion resistance n 30 The strength or durability of heavy metals such as chromium iron nickel copper zinc molybdenum tin tungsten and lead as well as their alloys makes them useful for the manufacture of artefacts such as tools machinery 219 appliances 220 utensils 221 pipes 220 railroad tracks 222 buildings 223 and bridges 224 automobiles 220 locks 225 furniture 226 ships 204 planes 227 coinage 228 and jewellery 229 They are also used as alloying additives for enhancing the properties of other metals n 31 Of the two dozen elements that have been used in the world s monetised coinage only two carbon and aluminium are not heavy metals 231 n 32 Gold silver and platinum are used in jewellery n 33 as are for example nickel copper indium and cobalt in coloured gold 234 Low cost jewellery and children s toys may be made to a significant degree of heavy metals such as chromium nickel cadmium or lead 235 Copper zinc tin and lead are mechanically weaker metals but have useful corrosion prevention properties While each of them will react with air the resulting patinas of either various copper salts 236 zinc carbonate tin oxide or a mixture of lead oxide carbonate and sulfate confer valuable protective properties 237 Copper and lead are therefore used for example as roofing materials 238 n 34 zinc acts as an anti corrosion agent in galvanised steel 239 and tin serves a similar purpose on steel cans 240 The workability and corrosion resistance of iron and chromium are increased by adding gadolinium the creep resistance of nickel is improved with the addition of thorium Tellurium is added to copper tellurium copper and steel alloys to improve their machinability and to lead to make it harder and more acid resistant 241 Biological and chemical edit nbsp Cerium IV oxide is used as a catalyst in self cleaning ovens 242 The biocidal effects of some heavy metals have been known since antiquity 243 Platinum osmium copper ruthenium and other heavy metals including arsenic are used in anti cancer treatments or have shown potential 244 Antimony anti protozoal bismuth anti ulcer gold anti arthritic and iron anti malarial are also important in medicine 245 Copper zinc silver gold or mercury are used in antiseptic formulations 246 small amounts of some heavy metals are used to control algal growth in for example cooling towers 247 Depending on their intended use as fertilisers or biocides agrochemicals may contain heavy metals such as chromium cobalt nickel copper zinc arsenic cadmium mercury or lead 248 Selected heavy metals are used as catalysts in fuel processing rhenium for example synthetic rubber and fibre production bismuth emission control devices palladium and in self cleaning ovens where cerium IV oxide in the walls of such ovens helps oxidise carbon based cooking residues 249 In soap chemistry heavy metals form insoluble soaps that are used in lubricating greases paint dryers and fungicides apart from lithium the alkali metals and the ammonium ion form soluble soaps 250 Colouring and optics edit nbsp Neodymium sulfate Nd2 SO4 3 used to colour glassware 251 The colours of glass ceramic glazes paints pigments and plastics are commonly produced by the inclusion of heavy metals or their compounds such as chromium manganese cobalt copper zinc selenium zirconium molybdenum silver tin praseodymium neodymium erbium tungsten iridium gold lead or uranium 252 Tattoo inks may contain heavy metals such as chromium cobalt nickel and copper 253 The high reflectivity of some heavy metals is important in the construction of mirrors including precision astronomical instruments Headlight reflectors rely on the excellent reflectivity of a thin film of rhodium 254 Electronics magnets and lighting edit nbsp The Topaz Solar Farm in southern California features nine million cadmium tellurium photovoltaic modules covering an area of 25 6 square kilometres 9 9 square miles Heavy metals or their compounds can be found in electronic components electrodes and wiring and solar panels where they may be used as either conductors semiconductors or insulators Molybdenum powder is used in circuit board inks 255 Ruthenium IV oxide coated titanium anodes are used for the industrial production of chlorine 256 Home electrical systems for the most part are wired with copper wire for its good conducting properties 257 Silver and gold are used in electrical and electronic devices particularly in contact switches as a result of their high electrical conductivity and capacity to resist or minimise the formation of impurities on their surfaces 258 The semiconductors cadmium telluride and gallium arsenide are used to make solar panels Hafnium oxide an insulator is used as a voltage controller in microchips tantalum oxide another insulator is used in capacitors in mobile phones 259 Heavy metals have been used in batteries for over 200 years at least since Volta invented his copper and silver voltaic pile in 1800 260 Promethium lanthanum and mercury are further examples found in respectively atomic nickel metal hydride and button cell batteries 261 Magnets are made of heavy metals such as manganese iron cobalt nickel niobium bismuth praseodymium neodymium gadolinium and dysprosium Neodymium magnets are the strongest type of permanent magnet commercially available They are key components of for example car door locks starter motors fuel pumps and power windows 262 Heavy metals are used in lighting lasers and light emitting diodes LEDs Flat panel displays incorporate a thin film of electrically conducting indium tin oxide Fluorescent lighting relies on mercury vapour for its operation Ruby lasers generate deep red beams by exciting chromium atoms the lanthanides are also extensively employed in lasers Gallium indium and arsenic 263 and copper iridium and platinum are used in LEDs the latter three in organic LEDs 264 Nuclear edit nbsp An X ray tube with a rotating anode typically a tungsten rhenium alloy on a molybdenum core backed with graphite 265 n 35 Niche uses of heavy metals with high atomic numbers occur in diagnostic imaging electron microscopy and nuclear science In diagnostic imaging heavy metals such as cobalt or tungsten make up the anode materials found in x ray tubes 268 In electron microscopy heavy metals such as lead gold palladium platinum or uranium are used to make conductive coatings and to introduce electron density into biological specimens by staining negative staining or vacuum deposition 269 In nuclear science nuclei of heavy metals such as chromium iron or zinc are sometimes fired at other heavy metal targets to produce superheavy elements 270 heavy metals are also employed as spallation targets for the production of neutrons 271 or radioisotopes such as astatine using lead bismuth thorium or uranium in the latter case 272 Notes edit Criteria used were density 3 1 above 3 5 g cm3 2 above 7 g cm3 atomic weight 3 gt 22 98 3 4 gt 40 excluding s and f block metals 4 5 gt 200 5 atomic number 6 gt 20 7 21 92 6 chemical behaviour 8 United States Pharmacopeia 7 8 9 9 Hawkes periodic table based definition excluding the lanthanides and actinides 10 and 10 Nieboer and Richardson s biochemical classifications 11 Densities of the elements are mainly from Emsley 12 Predicted densities have been used for At Fr and Fm Ts 13 Indicative densities were derived for Fm Md No and Lr based on their atomic weights estimated metallic radii 14 and predicted close packed crystalline structures 15 Atomic weights are from Emsley 12 inside back cover Metalloids were however excluded from Hawkes periodic table based definition given he noted it was not necessary to decide whether semimetals i e metalloids should be included as heavy metals 10 The test is not specific for any particular metals but is said to be capable of at least detecting Mo Cu Ag Cd Hg Sn Pb As Sb and Bi 8 In any event when the test uses hydrogen sulfide as the reagent it cannot detect Th Ti Zr Nb Ta or Cr 9 Transition and post transition metals that do not usually form coloured complexes are Sc and Y in group 3 21 Ag in group 11 22 Zn and Cd in group 12 21 23 and the metals of groups 13 16 24 Lanthanide Ln sulfides and hydroxides are insoluble 25 the latter can be obtained from aqueous solutions of Ln salts as coloured gelatinous precipitates 26 and Ln complexes have much the same colour as their aqua ions the majority of which are coloured 27 Actinide An sulfides may or may not be insoluble depending on the author Divalent uranium monosulfide is not attacked by boiling water 28 Trivalent actinide ions behave similarly to the trivalent lanthanide ions hence the sulfides in question may be insoluble but this is not explicitly stated 29 Tervalent An sulfides decompose 30 but Edelstein et al say they are soluble 31 whereas Haynes says thorium IV sulfide is insoluble 32 Early in the history of nuclear fission it had been noted that precipitation with hydrogen sulfide was a remarkably effective way of isolating and detecting transuranium elements in solution 33 In a similar vein Deschlag writes that the elements after uranium were expected to have insoluble sulfides by analogy with third row transition metals But he goes on to note that the elements after actinium were found to have properties different from those of the transition metals and claims they do not form insoluble sulfides 34 The An hydroxides are however insoluble 31 and can be precipitated from aqueous solutions of their salts 35 Finally many An complexes have deep and vivid colours 36 The heavier elements commonly to less commonly recognised as metalloids Ge As Sb Se Te Po At satisfy some of the three parts of Hawkes definition All of them have insoluble sulfides 35 37 but only Ge Te and Po apparently have effectively insoluble hydroxides 38 All bar At can be obtained as coloured sulfide precipitates from aqueous solutions of their salts 35 astatine is likewise precipitated from solution by hydrogen sulfide but since visible quantities of At have never been synthesised the colour of the precipitate is not known 37 39 As p block elements their complexes are usually colourless 40 The class A and class B terminology is analogous to the hard acid and soft base terminology sometimes used to refer to the behaviour of metal ions in inorganic systems 42 Be and Al are exceptions to this general trend They have somewhat higher electronegativity values 43 Being relatively small their 2 or 3 ions have high charge densities thereby polarising nearby electron clouds The net result is that Be and Al compounds have considerable covalent character 44 If Gmelin had been working with the imperial system of weights and measures he may have chosen 300 lb ft3 as his light heavy metal cutoff in which case selenium density 300 27 lb ft3 would have made the grade whereas 5 g cm3 312 14 lb ft3 Lead a cumulative poison has a relatively high abundance due to its extensive historical use and human caused discharge into the environment 79 Haynes shows an amount of lt 17 mg for tin 80 Iyengar records a figure of 5 mg for nickel 81 Haynes shows an amount of 10 mg 80 Selenium is a nonmetal Encompassing 45 heavy metals occurring in quantities of less than 10 mg each including As 7 mg Mo 5 Co 1 5 and Cr 1 4 82 Of the elements commonly recognised as metalloids B and Si were counted as nonmetals Ge As Sb and Te as heavy metals Ni Cu Zn Se Ag and Sb appear in the United States Government s Toxic Pollutant List 108 Mn Co and Sn are listed in the Australian Government s National Pollutant Inventory 109 Tungsten could be another such toxic heavy metal 110 Selenium is the most toxic of the heavy metals that are essential for mammals 114 Trace elements having an abundance much less than the one part per trillion of Ra and Pa namely Tc Pm Po At Ac Np and Pu are not shown Abundances are from Lide 131 and Emsley 132 occurrence types are from McQueen 133 In some cases for example in the presence of high energy gamma rays or in a very high temperature hydrogen rich environment the subject nuclei may experience neutron loss or proton gain resulting in the production of comparatively rare neutron deficient isotopes 138 The ejection of matter when two neutron stars collide is attributed to the interaction of their tidal forces possible crustal disruption and shock heating which is what happens if you floor the accelerator in a car when the engine is cold 141 Iron cobalt nickel germanium and tin are also siderophiles from a whole of Earth perspective 133 Heat escaping from the inner solid core is believed to generate motion in the outer core which is made of liquid iron alloys The motion of this liquid generates electrical currents which give rise to a magnetic field 152 Heavy metals that occur naturally in quantities too small to be economically mined Tc Pm Po At Ac Np and Pu are instead produced by artificial transmutation 154 The latter method is also used to produce heavy metals from americium onwards 155 Sulfides of the Group 1 and 2 metals and aluminium are hydrolysed by water 170 scandium 171 yttrium 172 and titanium sulfides 173 are insoluble For example the hydroxides of potassium rubidium and caesium have solubilities exceeding 100 grams per 100 grams of water 175 whereas those of aluminium 0 0001 176 and scandium lt 0 000 000 15 grams 177 are regarded as being insoluble Beryllium has what is described as a high melting point of 1560 K scandium and titanium melt at 1814 and 1941 K 182 Zinc is a soft metal with a Moh s hardness of 2 5 183 cadmium and lead have lower hardness ratings of 2 0 and 1 5 184 Zinc has a low melting point of 693 K cadmium and lead melt at 595 and 601 K 185 Some violence and abstraction of detail was applied to the sorting scheme in order to keep the number of categories to a manageable level The skin has largely turned green due to the formation of a protective patina composed of antlerite Cu3 OH 4SO4 atacamite Cu4 OH 6Cl2 brochantite Cu4 OH 6SO4 cuprous oxide Cu2O and tenorite CuO 218 For the lanthanides this is their only structural use as they are otherwise too reactive relatively expensive and moderately strong at best 230 Welter 232 classifies coinage metals as precious metals e g silver gold platinum heavy metals of very high durability nickel heavy metals of low durability copper iron zinc tin and lead and light metals aluminium Emsley 233 estimates a global loss of six tonnes of gold a year due to 18 carat wedding rings slowly wearing away Sheet lead exposed to the rigours of industrial and coastal climates will last for centuries 196 Electrons impacting the tungsten anode generate X rays 266 rhenium gives tungsten better resistance to thermal shock 267 molybdenum and graphite act as heat sinks Molybdenum also has a density nearly half that of tungsten thereby reducing the weight of the anode 265 Sources editCitations edit Emsley 2011 pp 288 374 Pourret Olivier Bollinger Jean Claude Hursthouse Andrew 2021 Heavy metal a misused term PDF Acta Geochimica 40 3 466 471 Bibcode 2021AcGch 40 466P doi 10 1007 s11631 021 00468 0 S2CID 232342843 a b c d e Duffus 2002 p 798 a b Rand Wells amp McCarty 1995 p 23 a b Baldwin amp Marshall 1999 p 267 a b Lyman 2003 p 452 a b The United States Pharmacopeia 1985 p 1189 a b Raghuram Soma Raju amp Sriramulu 2010 p 15 a b Thorne amp Roberts 1943 p 534 a b c d Hawkes 1997 a b Nieboer amp Richardson 1980 p 4 a b Emsley 2011 Hoffman Lee amp Pershina 2011 pp 1691 1723 Bonchev amp Kamenska 1981 p 1182 Silva 2010 pp 1628 1635 1639 1644 Fournier 1976 p 243 a b c Vernon 2013 p 1703 Morris 1992 p 1001 Gorbachev Zamyatnin amp Lbov 1980 p 5 a b c Duffus 2002 p 797 Liens 2010 p 1415 a b c Longo 1974 p 683 Tomasik amp Ratajewicz 1985 p 433 a b Herron 2000 p 511 a b Nathans 1963 p 265 Topp 1965 p 106 Schweitzer amp Pesterfield 2010 p 284 King 1995 p 297 Mellor 1924 p 628 Cotton 2006 p 66 Albutt amp Dell 1963 p 1796 Wiberg 2001 pp 1722 1723 Wiberg 2001 p 1724 a b Edelstein et al 2010 p 1796 Haynes 2015 pp 4 95 Weart 1983 p 94 Deschlag 2011 p 226 a b c Wulfsberg 2000 pp 209 211 Ahrland Liljenzin amp Rydberg 1973 p 478 a b Korenman 1959 p 1368 Yang Jolly amp O Keefe 1977 p 2980 Wiberg 2001 pp 592 Kolthoff amp Elving 1964 p 529 Close 2015 p 78 Parish 1977 p 89 a b Rainbow 1991 p 416 Nieboer amp Richardson 1980 pp 6 7 Lee 1996 pp 332 364 Clugston amp Flemming 2000 pp 294 334 336 Nieboer amp Richardson 1980 p 7 Nieboer amp Richardson 1980 Hubner Astin amp Herbert 2010 pp 1511 1512 Jarup 2003 p 168 Rasic Milutinovic amp Jovanovic 2013 p 6 Wijayawardena Megharaj amp Naidu 2016 p 176 Duffus 2002 pp 794 795 800 Emsley 2011 p 480 USEPA 1988 p 1 Uden 2005 pp 347 348 DeZuane 1997 p 93 Dev 2008 pp 2 3 a b Ikehata et al 2015 p 143 Emsley 2011 p 71 Emsley 2011 p 30 a b Podsiki 2008 p 1 Emsley 2011 p 106 Emsley 2011 p 62 Chakhmouradian Smith amp Kynicky 2015 pp 456 457 Cotton 1997 p ix Ryan 2012 p 369 Hermann Hoffmann amp Ashcroft 2013 pp 11604 1 Emsley 2011 p 75 Gribbon 2016 p x Emsley 2011 pp 428 429 414 Wiberg 2001 p 527 Emsley 2011 pp 437 21 22 346 347 408 409 Raymond 1984 pp 8 9 Chambers 1743 That which distinguishes metals from all other bodies is their heaviness Oxford English Dictionary 1989 Gordh amp Headrick 2003 p 753 Goldsmith 1982 p 526 Habashi 2009 p 31 Gmelin 1849 p 2 Magee 1969 p 14 Ridpath 2012 p 208 Duffus 2002 p 794 Leeper 1978 p ix Housecroft 2008 p 802 Shaw Sahu amp Mishra 1999 p 89 Martin amp Coughtrey 1982 pp 2 3 Hubner Astin amp Herbert 2010 p 1513 a b The Minerals Metals and Materials Society 2016 Emsley 2011 pp 35 passim Emsley 2011 pp 280 286 Baird amp Cann 2012 pp 549 551 a b Haynes 2015 pp 7 48 Iyengar 1998 p 553 Emsley 2011 pp 47 331 138 133 passim Nieboer amp Richardson 1978 p 2 Emsley 2011 pp 604 31 133 358 47 475 Valkovic 1990 pp 214 218 Emsley 2011 pp 331 89 552 Emsley 2011 p 571 Venugopal amp Luckey 1978 p 307 Emsley 2011 pp 24 passim Emsley 2011 pp 192 197 240 120 166 188 224 269 299 423 464 549 614 559 Duffus 2002 pp 794 799 Baird amp Cann 2012 p 519 Kozin amp Hansen 2013 p 80 Baird amp Cann 2012 pp 519 520 567 Rusyniak et al 2010 p 387 Di Maio 2001 p 208 Perry amp Vanderklein 1996 p 208 Love 1998 p 208 Hendrickson 2016 p 42 Reyes 2007 pp 1 20 35 36 Emsley 2011 p 311 Wiberg 2001 pp 1474 1501 a b c d e f g h Tokar et al 2013 Eisler 1993 pp 3 passim Lemly 1997 p 259 Ohlendorf 2003 p 490 State Water Control Resources Board 1987 p 63 Scott 1989 pp 107 108 International Antimony Association 2016 United States Government 2014 Australian Government 2016 United States Environmental Protection Agency 2014 Ong Tan amp Cheung 1997 p 44 Emsley 2011 p 146 Emsley 2011 p 476 Selinger 1978 p 369 Cole amp Stuart 2000 p 315 Clegg 2014 Emsley 2011 p 240 Emsley 2011 p 595 Namla Djadjiti Mangse George Koleoso Peter O Ogbaga Chukwuma C Nwagbara Onyinye F 2022 Assessment of Heavy Metal Concentrations of Municipal Open Air Dumpsite A Case Study of Gosa Dumpsite Abuja Innovations and Interdisciplinary Solutions for Underserved Areas Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences Social Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering Vol 449 pp 165 174 doi 10 1007 978 3 031 23116 2 13 ISBN 978 3 031 23115 5 Stankovic amp Stankovic 2013 pp 154 159 https blog nationalgeographic org 2015 08 03 heavy metals in motor oil have heavy consequences Heavy Metals in Motor Oil Have Heavy Consequences Fear In The Fields How Hazardous Wastes Become Fertilizer Spreading Heavy Metals On Farmland Is Perfectly Legal But Little Research Has Been Done To Find Out Whether It s Safe https hazwastehelp org ArtHazards glassworking aspx Art Hazards Wang P Hu Y Cheng H 2019 Municipal solid waste MSW incineration fly ash as an important source of heavy metal pollution in China Environmental Pollution 252 Pt A 461 475 doi 10 1016 j envpol 2019 04 082 PMID 31158674 S2CID 145832923 Bradl 2005 pp 15 17 20 Harvey Handley amp Taylor 2015 p 12276 Howell et al 2012 Cole et al 2011 pp 2589 2590 Amasawa et al 2016 pp 95 101 Massarani 2015 Torrice 2016 a b c Lide 2004 pp 14 17 Emsley 2011 pp 29 passim a b c McQueen 2009 p 74 a b Cox 1997 pp 73 89 Cox 1997 pp 32 63 85 Podosek 2011 p 482 Padmanabhan 2001 p 234 Rehder 2010 pp 32 33 Hofmann 2002 pp 23 24 Hadhazy 2016 Choptuik Lehner amp Pretorias 2015 p 383 Cox 1997 pp 83 91 102 103 Berry amp Mason 1959 pp 210 211 Rankin 2011 p 69 Hartmann 2005 p 197 Yousif 2007 pp 11 12 Berry amp Mason 1959 p 214 Yousif 2007 p 11 Wiberg 2001 p 1511 Emsley 2011 p 403 Litasov amp Shatskiy 2016 p 27 Sanders 2003 Preuss 2011 Natural Resources Canada 2015 MacKay MacKay amp Henderson 2002 pp 203 204 Emsley 2011 pp 525 528 428 429 414 57 58 22 346 347 408 409 Keller Wolf amp Shani 2012 p 98 Emsley 2011 pp 32 et seq Emsley 2011 p 437 Chen amp Huang 2006 p 208 Crundwell et al 2011 pp 411 413 Renner et al 2012 p 332 Seymour amp O Farrelly 2012 pp 10 12 Crundwell et al 2011 p 409 International Platinum Group Metals Association n d pp 3 4 McLemore 2008 p 44 Wiberg 2001 p 1277 Russell amp Lee 2005 p 437 McCurdy 1992 p 186 von Zeerleder 1949 p 68 Chawla amp Chawla 2013 p 55 von Gleich 2006 p 3 Biddle amp Bush 1949 p 180 Magill 1992 p 1380 a b Gidding 1973 pp 335 336 Wiberg 2001 p 520 a b Schweitzer amp Pesterfield 2010 p 230 Macintyre 1994 p 334 Booth 1957 p 85 Haynes 2015 pp 4 96 Schweitzer amp Pesterfield 2010 p 230 The authors note however that The sulfides of Ga III and Cr III tend to dissolve and or decompose in water Sidgwick 1950 p 96 Ondreicka Kortus amp Ginter 1971 p 294 Gschneidner 1975 p 195 Hasan 1996 p 251 Brady amp Holum 1995 p 825 Cotton 2006 p 66 Ahrland Liljenzin amp Rydberg 1973 p 478 Nieboer amp Richardson 1980 p 10 Russell amp Lee 2005 pp 158 434 180 Schweitzer 2003 p 603 Samsonov 1968 p 432 Russell amp Lee 2005 pp 338 339 338 411 Emsley 2011 pp 260 401 Jones 2001 p 3 Berea Rodriguez lbelo amp Navarro 2016 p 203 Alves Berutti amp Sanchez 2012 p 94 Yadav Antony amp Subba Reddy 2012 p 231 Masters 1981 p 5 Wulfsberg 1987 pp 200 201 Bryson amp Hammond 2005 p 120 high electron density Frommer amp Stabulas Savage 2014 pp 69 70 high atomic number Landis Sofield amp Yu 2011 p 269 Prieto 2011 p 10 Pickering 1991 pp 5 6 17 a b Emsley 2011 p 286 Berger amp Bruning 1979 p 173 Jackson amp Summitt 2006 pp 10 13 Shedd 2002 p 80 5 Kantra 2001 p 10 Spolek 2007 p 239 White 2010 p 139 Dapena amp Teves 1982 p 78 Burkett 2010 p 80 a b Moore amp Ramamoorthy 1984 p 102 a b National Materials Advisory Board 1973 p 58 Livesey 2012 p 57 VanGelder 2014 pp 354 801 National Materials Advisory Board 1971 pp 35 37 Frick 2000 p 342 Rockhoff 2012 p 314 Russell amp Lee 2005 pp 16 96 Morstein 2005 p 129 Russell amp Lee 2005 pp 218 219 Lach et al 2015 Di Maio 2016 p 154 Preschel 2005 Guandalini et al 2011 p 488 Scoullos et al 2001 p 315 Ariel Barta amp Brandon 1973 p 126 Wingerson 1986 p 35 Matyi amp Baboian 1986 p 299 Livingston 1991 pp 1401 1407 Casey 1993 p 156 a b c Bradl 2005 p 25 Kumar Srivastava amp Srivastava 1994 p 259 Nzierzanowski amp Gawronski 2012 p 42 Pacheco Torgal Jalali amp Fucic 2012 pp 283 294 297 333 Venner et al 2004 p 124 Technical Publications 1958 p 235 Here is a rugged hard metal cutter for cutting through padlocks steel grilles and other heavy metals Naja amp Volesky 2009 p 41 Department of the Navy 2009 pp 3 3 13 Rebhandl et al 2007 p 1729 Greenberg amp Patterson 2008 p 239 Russell amp Lee 2005 pp 437 441 Roe amp Roe 1992 Welter 1976 p 4 Emsley 2011 p 208 Emsley 2011 p 206 Guney amp Zagury 2012 p 1238 Cui et al 2015 p 77 Brephol amp McCreight 2001 p 15 Russell amp Lee 2005 pp 337 404 411 Emsley 2011 pp 141 286 Emsley 2011 p 625 Emsley 2011 pp 555 557 Emsley 2011 p 531 Emsley 2011 p 123 Weber amp Rutula 2001 p 415 Dunn 2009 Bonetti et al 2009 pp 1 84 201 Desoize 2004 p 1529 Atlas 1986 p 359 Lima et al 2013 p 1 Volesky 1990 p 174 Nakbanpote Meesungnoen amp Prasad 2016 p 180 Emsley 2011 pp 447 74 384 123 Elliot 1946 p 11 Warth 1956 p 571 McColm 1994 p 215 Emsley 2011 pp 135 313 141 495 626 479 630 334 495 556 424 339 169 571 252 205 286 599 Everts 2016 Emsley 2011 p 450 Emsley 2011 p 334 Emsley 2011 p 459 Moselle 2004 pp 409 410 Russell amp Lee 2005 p 323 Emsley 2011 p 212 Tretkoff 2006 Emsley 2011 pp 428 276 326 327 Emsley 2011 pp 73 141 141 141 355 73 424 340 189 189 Emsley 2011 pp 192 242 194 Baranoff 2015 p 80 Wong et al 2015 p 6535 a b Ball Moore amp Turner 2008 p 177 Ball Moore amp Turner 2008 pp 248 249 255 Russell amp Lee 2005 p 238 Tisza 2001 p 73 Chandler amp Roberson 2009 pp 47 367 369 373 Ismail Khulbe amp Matsuura 2015 p 302 Ebbing amp Gammon 2017 p 695 Pan amp Dai 2015 p 69 Brown 1987 p 48 References edit Ahrland S Liljenzin J O amp Rydberg J 1973 Solution chemistry in J C Bailar amp A F Trotman Dickenson eds Comprehensive Inorganic Chemistry vol 5 The Actinides Pergamon Press Oxford Albutt M amp Dell R 1963 The nitrites and sulphides of uranium thorium and plutonium A review of present knowledge UK Atomic Energy Authority Research Group Harwell Berkshire Alves A K Berutti F A amp Sanche F A L 2012 Nanomaterials and catalysis in C P Bergmann amp M J de Andrade ads Nanonstructured Materials for Engineering Applications Springer Verlag Berlin ISBN 978 3 642 19130 5 Amasawa E Yi Teah H Yu Ting Khew J Ikeda I amp Onuki M 2016 Drawing Lessons from the Minamata Incident for the General Public Exercise on Resilience Minamata Unit AY2014 in M Esteban T Akiyama C Chen I Ikea T Mino eds Sustainability Science Field Methods and Exercises Springer International Switzerland pp 93 116 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 32930 7 5 ISBN 978 3 319 32929 1 Ariel E Barta J amp Brandon D 1973 Preparation and properties of heavy metals Powder Metallurgy International vol 5 no 3 pp 126 129 Atlas R M 1986 Basic and Practical Microbiology Macmillan Publishing Company New York ISBN 978 0 02 304350 5 Australian Government 2016 National Pollutant Inventory Department of the Environment and Energy accessed 16 August 2016 Baird C amp Cann M 2012 Environmental Chemistry 5th ed W H Freeman and Company New York ISBN 978 1 4292 7704 4 Baldwin D R amp Marshall W J 1999 Heavy metal poisoning and its laboratory investigation Annals of Clinical Biochemistry vol 36 no 3 pp 267 300 doi 10 1177 000456329903600301 Ball J L Moore A D amp Turner S 2008 Ball and Moore s Essential Physics for Radiographers 4th ed Blackwell Publishing Chichester ISBN 978 1 4051 6101 5 Banfalvi G 2011 Heavy metals trace elements and their cellular effects in G Banfalvi ed Cellular Effects of Heavy Metals Springer Dordrecht pp 3 28 ISBN 978 94 007 0427 5 Baranoff E 2015 First row transition metal complexes for the conversion of light into electricity and electricity into light in W Y Wong ed Organometallics and Related Molecules for Energy Conversion Springer Heidelberg pp 61 90 ISBN 978 3 662 46053 5 Berea E Rodriguez lbelo M amp Navarro J A R 2016 Platinum Group Metal Organic frameworks in 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Metals in the Environment Origin Interaction and Remediation Elsevier Amsterdam ISBN 978 0 12 088381 3 Brady J E amp Holum J R 1995 Chemistry The Study of Matter and its Changes 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons New York ISBN 978 0 471 10042 3 Brephohl E amp McCreight T ed 2001 The Theory and Practice of Goldsmithing C Lewton Brain trans Brynmorgen Press Portland Maine ISBN 978 0 9615984 9 5 Brown I 1987 Astatine Its organonuclear chemistry and biomedical applications in H J Emeleus amp A G Sharpe eds Advances in Inorganic Chemistry vol 31 Academic Press Orlando pp 43 88 ISBN 978 0 12 023631 2 Bryson R M amp Hammond C 2005 Generic methodologies for nanotechnology Characterisation in R Kelsall I W Hamley amp M Geoghegan Nanoscale Science and Technology John Wiley amp Sons Chichester pp 56 129 ISBN 978 0 470 85086 2 Burkett B 2010 Sport Mechanics for Coaches 3rd ed Human Kinetics Champaign Illinois ISBN 978 0 7360 8359 1 Casey C 1993 Restructuring work New work and new workers in post 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Applied Chemistry vol 74 no 5 pp 793 807 doi 10 1351 pac200274050793 Dunn P 2009 Unusual metals could forge new cancer drugs University of Warwick accessed 23 March 2016 Ebbing D D amp Gammon S D 2017 General Chemistry 11th ed Cengage Learning Boston ISBN 978 1 305 58034 3 Edelstein N M Fuger J Katz J L amp Morss L R 2010 Summary and comparison of properties of the actinde and transactinide elements in L R Morss N M Edelstein amp J Fuger eds The Chemistry of the Actinide and Transactinide Elements 4th ed vol 1 6 Springer Dordrecht pp 1753 1835 ISBN 978 94 007 0210 3 Eisler R 1993 Zinc Hazards to Fish Wildlife and Invertebrates A Synoptic Review Biological Report 10 U S Department of the Interior Laurel Maryland accessed 2 September 2016 Elliott S B 1946 The Alkaline earth and Heavy metal Soaps Reinhold Publishing Corporation New York Emsley J 2011 Nature s Building Blocks new edition Oxford University Press Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 960563 7 Everts S 2016 What chemicals are in your tattoo 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Dictionary of Entomology CABI Publishing Wallingford ISBN 978 0 85199 655 4 Greenberg B R amp Patterson D 2008 Art in Chemistry Chemistry in Art 2nd ed Teachers Ideas Press Westport Connecticut ISBN 978 1 59158 309 7 Gribbon J 2016 13 8 The Quest to Find the True Age of the Universe and the Theory of Everything Yale University Press New Haven ISBN 978 0 300 21827 5 Gschneidner Jr K A 1975 Inorganic compounds in C T Horowitz ed Scandium Its Occurrence Chemistry Physics Metallurgy Biology and Technology Academic Press London pp 152 251 ISBN 978 0 12 355850 3 Guandalini G S Zhang L Fornero E Centeno J A Mokashi V P Ortiz P A Stockelman M D Osterburg A R amp Chapman G G 2011 Tissue distribution of tungsten in mice following oral exposure to sodium tungstate Chemical Research in Toxicology vol 24 no 4 pp 488 493 doi 10 1021 tx200011k Guney M amp Zagury G J 2012 Heavy metals in toys and low cost jewelry Critical review of U S and Canadian legislations and recommendations for testing 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096710 3 Podsiki C 2008 Heavy metals their salts and other compounds AIC News November special insert pp 1 4 Preschel J July 29 2005 Green bullets not so eco friendly CBS News accessed 18 March 2016 Preuss P 17 July 2011 What keeps the Earth cooking Berkeley Lab accessed 17 July 2016 Prieto C 2011 The Adventures of a Cello Revised Edition with a New Epilogue University of Texas Press Austin ISBN 978 0 292 72393 1 Raghuram P Soma Raju I V amp Sriramulu J 2010 Heavy metals testing in active pharmaceutical ingredients an alternate approach Pharmazie vol 65 no 1 pp 15 18 doi 10 1691 ph 2010 9222 Rainbow P S 1991 The biology of heavy metals in the sea in J Rose ed Water and the Environment Gordon and Breach Science Publishers Philadelphia pp 415 432 ISBN 978 2 88124 747 7 Rand G M Wells P G amp McCarty L S 1995 Introduction to aquatic toxicology in G M Rand ed Fundamentals of Aquatic Toxicology Effects Environmental Fate and Risk Assessment 2nd ed Taylor amp Francis London pp 3 70 ISBN 978 1 56032 090 6 Rankin W J 2011 Minerals Metals and Sustainability Meeting Future Material Needs CSIRO Publishing Collingwood Victoria ISBN 978 0 643 09726 1 Rasic Milutinovic Z amp Jovanovic D 2013 Toxic metals in M Ferrante G Oliveri Conti Z Rasic Milutinovic amp D Jovanovic eds Health Effects of Metals and Related Substances in Drinking Water IWA Publishing London ISBN 978 1 68015 557 0 Raymond R 1984 Out of the Fiery Furnace The Impact of Metals on the History of Mankind Macmillan South Melbourne ISBN 978 0 333 38024 6 Rebhandl W Milassin A Brunner L Steffan I Benko T Hormann M Burschen J 2007 In vitro study of ingested coins Leave them or retrieve them Journal of Paediatric Surgery vol 42 no 10 pp 1729 1734 doi 10 1016 j jpedsurg 2007 05 031 Rehder D 2010 Chemistry in Space From Interstellar Matter to the Origin of Life Wiley VCH Weinheim ISBN 978 3 527 32689 1 Renner H Schlamp G Kleinwachter I Drost E Luchow H M Tews P Panster P Diehl M Lang J Kreuzer T Knodler A Starz K A Dermann 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Kao L amp Furbee B 2010 Heavy metal poisoning Management of intoxication and antidotes in A Luch ed Molecular Clinical and Environmental Toxicology vol 2 Birkhauser Verlag Basel pp 365 396 lin, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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