fbpx
Wikipedia

Ruthenium

Ruthenium is a chemical element with the symbol Ru and atomic number 44. It is a rare transition metal belonging to the platinum group of the periodic table. Like the other metals of the platinum group, ruthenium is inert to most other chemicals. Russian-born scientist of Baltic-German ancestry Karl Ernst Claus discovered the element in 1844 at Kazan State University and named ruthenium in honor of Russia.[a] Ruthenium is usually found as a minor component of platinum ores; the annual production has risen from about 19 tonnes in 2009[6] to some 35.5 tonnes in 2017.[7] Most ruthenium produced is used in wear-resistant electrical contacts and thick-film resistors. A minor application for ruthenium is in platinum alloys and as a chemistry catalyst. A new application of ruthenium is as the capping layer for extreme ultraviolet photomasks. Ruthenium is generally found in ores with the other platinum group metals in the Ural Mountains and in North and South America. Small but commercially important quantities are also found in pentlandite extracted from Sudbury, Ontario and in pyroxenite deposits in South Africa.[8]

Ruthenium, 44Ru
Ruthenium
Pronunciation/rˈθniəm/ (roo-THEE-nee-əm)
Appearancesilvery white metallic
Standard atomic weight Ar°(Ru)
  • 101.07±0.02
  • 101.07±0.02 (abridged)[1]
Ruthenium in the periodic table
Hydrogen Helium
Lithium Beryllium Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine Neon
Sodium Magnesium Aluminium Silicon Phosphorus Sulfur Chlorine Argon
Potassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine Krypton
Rubidium Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenium Rhodium Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine Xenon
Caesium Barium Lanthanum Cerium Praseodymium Neodymium Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury (element) Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium Astatine Radon
Francium Radium Actinium Thorium Protactinium Uranium Neptunium Plutonium Americium Curium Berkelium Californium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Nobelium Lawrencium Rutherfordium Dubnium Seaborgium Bohrium Hassium Meitnerium Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium Nihonium Flerovium Moscovium Livermorium Tennessine Oganesson
Fe

Ru

Os
technetiumrutheniumrhodium
Atomic number (Z)44
Groupgroup 8
Periodperiod 5
Block  d-block
Electron configuration[Kr] 4d7 5s1
Electrons per shell2, 8, 18, 15, 1
Physical properties
Phase at STPsolid
Melting point2607 K ​(2334 °C, ​4233 °F)
Boiling point4423 K ​(4150 °C, ​7502 °F)
Density (near r.t.)12.45 g/cm3
when liquid (at m.p.)10.65 g/cm3
Heat of fusion38.59 kJ/mol
Heat of vaporization619 kJ/mol
Molar heat capacity24.06 J/(mol·K)
Vapor pressure
P (Pa) 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 k
at T (K) 2588 2811 3087 3424 3845 4388
Atomic properties
Oxidation states−4, −2, 0, +1,[2] +2, +3, +4, +5, +6, +7, +8 (a mildly acidic oxide)
ElectronegativityPauling scale: 2.2
Ionization energies
  • 1st: 710.2 kJ/mol
  • 2nd: 1620 kJ/mol
  • 3rd: 2747 kJ/mol
Atomic radiusempirical: 134 pm
Covalent radius146±7 pm
Spectral lines of ruthenium
Other properties
Natural occurrenceprimordial
Crystal structurehexagonal close-packed (hcp)
Speed of sound thin rod5970 m/s (at 20 °C)
Thermal expansion6.4 µm/(m⋅K) (at 25 °C)
Thermal conductivity117 W/(m⋅K)
Electrical resistivity71 nΩ⋅m (at 0 °C)
Magnetic orderingparamagnetic[3]
Molar magnetic susceptibility+39×10−6 cm3/mol (298 K)[3]
Young's modulus447 GPa
Shear modulus173 GPa
Bulk modulus220 GPa
Poisson ratio0.30
Mohs hardness6.5
Brinell hardness2160 MPa
CAS Number7440-18-8
History
Namingafter Ruthenia, the 19th-century Latin name for Russia[a]
Discovery and first isolationKarl Ernst Claus (1844)
Main isotopes of ruthenium
Iso­tope Decay
abun­dance half-life (t1/2) mode pro­duct
96Ru 5.54% stable
97Ru syn 2.9 d ε 97Tc
γ
98Ru 1.87% stable
99Ru 12.76% stable
100Ru 12.60% stable
101Ru 17.06% stable
102Ru 31.55% stable
103Ru syn 39.26 d β 103Rh
γ
104Ru 18.62% stable
106Ru syn 373.59 d β 106Rh
 Category: Ruthenium
| references

Characteristics

Physical properties

 
Gas phase grown crystals of ruthenium metal.

Ruthenium, a polyvalent hard white metal, is a member of the platinum group and is in group 8 of the periodic table:

Z Element No. of electrons/shell
26 iron 2, 8, 14, 2
44 ruthenium 2, 8, 18, 15, 1
76 osmium 2, 8, 18, 32, 14, 2
108 hassium 2, 8, 18, 32, 32, 14, 2

Whereas all other group 8 elements have two electrons in the outermost shell, in ruthenium, the outermost shell has only one electron (the final electron is in a lower shell). This anomaly is observed in the neighboring metals niobium (41), molybdenum (42), and rhodium (45).

Chemical properties

Ruthenium has four crystal modifications and does not tarnish at ambient conditions; it oxidizes upon heating to 800 °C (1,070 K). Ruthenium dissolves in fused alkalis to give ruthenates (RuO2−
4
). It is not attacked by acids (even aqua regia) but is attacked by halogens at high temperatures.[8] Indeed, ruthenium is most readily attacked by oxidizing agents.[9] Small amounts of ruthenium can increase the hardness of platinum and palladium. The corrosion resistance of titanium is increased markedly by the addition of a small amount of ruthenium.[8] The metal can be plated by electroplating and by thermal decomposition. A ruthenium-molybdenum alloy is known to be superconductive at temperatures below 10.6 K.[8] Ruthenium is the only 4d transition metal that can assume the group oxidation state +8, and even then it is less stable there than the heavier congener osmium: this is the first group from the left of the table where the second and third-row transition metals display notable differences in chemical behavior. Like iron but unlike osmium, ruthenium can form aqueous cations in its lower oxidation states of +2 and +3.[10]

Ruthenium is the first in a downward trend in the melting and boiling points and atomization enthalpy in the 4d transition metals after the maximum seen at molybdenum, because the 4d subshell is more than half full and the electrons are contributing less to metallic bonding. (Technetium, the previous element, has an exceptionally low value that is off the trend due to its half-filled [Kr]4d55s2 configuration, though it is not as far off the trend in the 4d series as manganese in the 3d transition series.)[11] Unlike the lighter congener iron, ruthenium is paramagnetic at room temperature, as iron also is above its Curie point.[12]

The reduction potentials in acidic aqueous solution for some common ruthenium ions are shown below:[13]

0.455 V Ru2+ + 2e ↔ Ru
0.249 V Ru3+ + e ↔ Ru2+
1.120 V RuO2 + 4H+ + 2e ↔ Ru2+ + 2H2O
1.563 V RuO2−
4
+ 8H+ + 4e
↔ Ru2+ + 4H2O
1.368 V RuO
4
+ 8H+ + 5e
↔ Ru2+ + 4H2O
1.387 V RuO4 + 4H+ + 4e ↔ RuO2 + 2H2O

Isotopes

Naturally occurring ruthenium is composed of seven stable isotopes. Additionally, 34 radioactive isotopes have been discovered. Of these radioisotopes, the most stable are 106Ru with a half-life of 373.59 days, 103Ru with a half-life of 39.26 days and 97Ru with a half-life of 2.9 days.[14][15]

Fifteen other radioisotopes have been characterized with atomic weights ranging from 89.93 u (90Ru) to 114.928 u (115Ru). Most of these have half-lives that are less than five minutes except 95Ru (half-life: 1.643 hours) and 105Ru (half-life: 4.44 hours).[14][15]

The primary decay mode before the most abundant isotope, 102Ru, is electron capture and the primary mode after is beta emission. The primary decay product before 102Ru is technetium and the primary decay product after is rhodium.[14][15]

106Ru is a product of fission of a nucleus of uranium or plutonium. High concentrations of detected atmospheric 106Ru were associated with an alleged undeclared nuclear accident in Russia in 2017.[16]

Occurrence

As the 78th most abundant element in Earth's crust, ruthenium is relatively rare,[17] found in about 100 parts per trillion.[18] This element is generally found in ores with the other platinum group metals in the Ural Mountains and in North and South America. Small but commercially important quantities are also found in pentlandite extracted from Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, and in pyroxenite deposits in South Africa. The native form of ruthenium is a very rare mineral (Ir replaces part of Ru in its structure).[19][20] Ruthenium has a relatively high fission product yield in nuclear fission and given that its most long lived radioisotope has a half life of "only" around a year, there are often proposals to recover ruthenium in a new kind of nuclear reprocessing from spent fuel. An unusual ruthenium deposit can also be found at the natural nuclear fission reactor that was active in Oklo, Gabon some two billion years ago. Indeed, the isotope ratio of ruthenium found there was one of several ways used to confirm that a nuclear fission chain reaction had indeed occurred at that site in the geological past. Uranium is no longer mined at Oklo and there have never been serious attempts to recover any of the platinum group metals present there.

Production

Roughly 30 tonnes of ruthenium are mined each year[21] with world reserves estimated at 5,000 tonnes.[17] The composition of the mined platinum group metal (PGM) mixtures varies widely, depending on the geochemical formation. For example, the PGMs mined in South Africa contain on average 11% ruthenium while the PGMs mined in the former USSR contain only 2% (1992).[22][23] Ruthenium, osmium, and iridium are considered the minor platinum group metals.[12]

Ruthenium, like the other platinum group metals, is obtained commercially as a by-product from nickel, and copper, and platinum metals ore processing. During electrorefining of copper and nickel, noble metals such as silver, gold, and the platinum group metals precipitate as anode mud, the feedstock for the extraction.[19][20] The metals are converted to ionized solutes by any of several methods, depending on the composition of the feedstock. One representative method is fusion with sodium peroxide followed by dissolution in aqua regia, and solution in a mixture of chlorine with hydrochloric acid.[24][25] Osmium, ruthenium, rhodium, and iridium are insoluble in aqua regia and readily precipitate, leaving the other metals in solution. Rhodium is separated from the residue by treatment with molten sodium bisulfate. The insoluble residue, containing Ru, Os, and Ir is treated with sodium oxide, in which Ir is insoluble, producing dissolved Ru and Os salts. After oxidation to the volatile oxides, RuO
4
is separated from OsO
4
by precipitation of (NH4)3RuCl6 with ammonium chloride or by distillation or extraction with organic solvents of the volatile osmium tetroxide.[26] Hydrogen is used to reduce ammonium ruthenium chloride yielding a powder.[8][27] The product is reduced using hydrogen, yielding the metal as a powder or sponge metal that can be treated with powder metallurgy techniques or argon-arc welding.[8][28]

Ruthenium is contained in spent nuclear fuel both as a direct fission product and as a product of neutron absorption by long-lived fission product 99
Tc
. After allowing the unstable isotopes of ruthenium to decay, chemical extraction could yield ruthenium for use or sale in all applications ruthenium is otherwise used for.[29][30]

Ruthenium can also be produced by deliberate nuclear transmutation from 99
Tc
. Given the relatively long half life, high fission product yield and high chemical mobility in the environment, 99
Tc
is among the most often proposed non-actinides for commercial scale nuclear transmutation. 99
Tc
has a relatively big neutron cross section and given that Technetium has no stable isotopes, a sample would not run into the problem of neutron activation of stable isotopes. Significant amounts of 99
Tc
are produced both by nuclear fission and nuclear medicine which makes ample use of 99m
Tc
which decays to 99
Tc
. Exposing the 99
Tc
target to strong enough neutron radiation will eventually yield appreciable quantities of Ruthenium which can be chemically separated and sold while consuming 99
Tc
.[31][32]

Chemical compounds

The oxidation states of ruthenium range from 0 to +8, and −2. The properties of ruthenium and osmium compounds are often similar. The +2, +3, and +4 states are the most common. The most prevalent precursor is ruthenium trichloride, a red solid that is poorly defined chemically but versatile synthetically.[27]

Oxides and chalcogenides

Ruthenium can be oxidized to ruthenium(IV) oxide (RuO2, oxidation state +4), which can, in turn, be oxidized by sodium metaperiodate to the volatile yellow tetrahedral ruthenium tetroxide, RuO4, an aggressive, strong oxidizing agent with structure and properties analogous to osmium tetroxide. RuO4 is mostly used as an intermediate in the purification of ruthenium from ores and radiowastes.[33]

Dipotassium ruthenate (K2RuO4, +6) and potassium perruthenate (KRuO4, +7) are also known.[34] Unlike osmium tetroxide, ruthenium tetroxide is less stable, is strong enough as an oxidising agent to oxidise dilute hydrochloric acid and organic solvents like ethanol at room temperature, and is easily reduced to ruthenate (RuO2−
4
) in aqueous alkaline solutions; it decomposes to form the dioxide above 100 °C. Unlike iron but like osmium, ruthenium does not form oxides in its lower +2 and +3 oxidation states.[35] Ruthenium forms dichalcogenides, which are diamagnetic semiconductors crystallizing in the pyrite structure.[35] Ruthenium sulfide (RuS2) occurs naturally as the mineral laurite.

Like iron, ruthenium does not readily form oxoanions and prefers to achieve high coordination numbers with hydroxide ions instead. Ruthenium tetroxide is reduced by cold dilute potassium hydroxide to form black potassium perruthenate, KRuO4, with ruthenium in the +7 oxidation state. Potassium perruthenate can also be produced by oxidising potassium ruthenate, K2RuO4, with chlorine gas. The perruthenate ion is unstable and is reduced by water to form the orange ruthenate. Potassium ruthenate may be synthesized by reacting ruthenium metal with molten potassium hydroxide and potassium nitrate.[36]

Some mixed oxides are also known, such as MIIRuIVO3, Na3RuVO4, Na
2
RuV
2
O
7
, and MII
2
LnIII
RuV
O
6
.[36]

Halides and oxyhalides

The highest known ruthenium halide is the hexafluoride, a dark brown solid that melts at 54 °C. It hydrolyzes violently upon contact with water and easily disproportionates to form a mixture of lower ruthenium fluorides, releasing fluorine gas. Ruthenium pentafluoride is a tetrameric dark green solid that is also readily hydrolyzed, melting at 86.5 °C. The yellow ruthenium tetrafluoride is probably also polymeric and can be formed by reducing the pentafluoride with iodine. Among the binary compounds of ruthenium, these high oxidation states are known only in the oxides and fluorides.[37]

Ruthenium trichloride is a well-known compound, existing in a black α-form and a dark brown β-form: the trihydrate is red.[38] Of the known trihalides, trifluoride is dark brown and decomposes above 650 °C, tribromide is dark-brown and decomposes above 400 °C, and triiodide is black.[37] Of the dihalides, difluoride is not known, dichloride is brown, dibromide is black, and diiodide is blue.[37] The only known oxyhalide is the pale green ruthenium(VI) oxyfluoride, RuOF4.[38]

Coordination and organometallic complexes

 
Tris(bipyridine)ruthenium(II) chloride.
 
Grubbs' catalyst, which earned a Nobel Prize for its inventor, is used in alkene metathesis reactions.

Ruthenium forms a variety of coordination complexes. Examples are the many pentaammine derivatives [Ru(NH3)5L]n+ that often exist for both Ru(II) and Ru(III). Derivatives of bipyridine and terpyridine are numerous, best known being the luminescent tris(bipyridine)ruthenium(II) chloride.

Ruthenium forms a wide range compounds with carbon-ruthenium bonds. Grubbs' catalyst is used for alkene metathesis.[39] Ruthenocene is analogous to ferrocene structurally, but exhibits distinctive redox properties. The colorless liquid ruthenium pentacarbonyl converts in the absence of CO pressure to the dark red solid triruthenium dodecacarbonyl. Ruthenium trichloride reacts with carbon monoxide to give many derivatives including RuHCl(CO)(PPh3)3 and Ru(CO)2(PPh3)3 (Roper's complex). Heating solutions of ruthenium trichloride in alcohols with triphenylphosphine gives tris(triphenylphosphine)ruthenium dichloride (RuCl2(PPh3)3), which converts to the hydride complex chlorohydridotris(triphenylphosphine)ruthenium(II) (RuHCl(PPh3)3).[27]

History

Though naturally occurring platinum alloys containing all six platinum-group metals were used for a long time by pre-Columbian Americans and known as a material to European chemists from the mid-16th century, not until the mid-18th century was platinum identified as a pure element. That natural platinum contained palladium, rhodium, osmium and iridium was discovered in the first decade of the 19th century.[40] Platinum in alluvial sands of Russian rivers gave access to raw material for use in plates and medals and for the minting of ruble coins, starting in 1828.[41] Residues from platinum production for coinage were available in the Russian Empire, and therefore most of the research on them was done in Eastern Europe.

It is possible that the Polish chemist Jędrzej Śniadecki isolated element 44 (which he called "vestium" after the asteroid Vesta discovered shortly before) from South American platinum ores in 1807. He published an announcement of his discovery in 1808.[42] His work was never confirmed, however, and he later withdrew his claim of discovery.[17]

Jöns Berzelius and Gottfried Osann nearly discovered ruthenium in 1827.[43] They examined residues that were left after dissolving crude platinum from the Ural Mountains in aqua regia. Berzelius did not find any unusual metals, but Osann thought he found three new metals, which he called pluranium, ruthenium, and polinium.[8] This discrepancy led to a long-standing controversy between Berzelius and Osann about the composition of the residues.[5] As Osann was not able to repeat his isolation of ruthenium, he eventually relinquished his claims.[5][44] The name "ruthenium" was chosen by Osann because the analysed samples stemmed from the Ural Mountains in Russia.[45] The name itself derives from the Latin word Ruthenia; this word was used at the time as the Latin name for Russia.[5][a]

In 1844, Karl Ernst Claus, a Russian scientist of Baltic German descent, showed that the compounds prepared by Gottfried Osann contained small amounts of ruthenium, which Claus had discovered the same year.[8][40] Claus isolated ruthenium from the platinum residues of rouble production while he was working in Kazan University, Kazan,[5] the same way its heavier congener osmium had been discovered four decades earlier.[18] Claus showed that ruthenium oxide contained a new metal and obtained 6 grams of ruthenium from the part of crude platinum that is insoluble in aqua regia.[5] Choosing the name for the new element, Claus stated: "I named the new body, in honour of my Motherland, ruthenium. I had every right to call it by this name because Mr. Osann relinquished his ruthenium and the word does not yet exist in chemistry."[5][46] In doing so, Claus started a trend that continues to this day - naming an element after a country.[47]

Applications

Approximately 30.9 tonnes of ruthenium were consumed in 2016, 13.8 of them in electrical applications, 7.7 in catalysis, and 4.6 in electrochemistry.[21]

Because it hardens platinum and palladium alloys, ruthenium is used in electrical contacts, where a thin film is sufficient to achieve the desired durability. With its similar properties to and lower cost than rhodium,[28] electric contacts are a major use of ruthenium.[19][48] The ruthenium plate is applied to the electrical contact and electrode base metal by electroplating[49] or sputtering.[50]

Ruthenium dioxide with lead and bismuth ruthenates are used in thick-film chip resistors.[51][52][53] These two electronic applications account for 50% of the ruthenium consumption.[17]

Ruthenium is seldom alloyed with metals outside the platinum group, where small quantities improve some properties. The added corrosion resistance in titanium alloys led to the development of a special alloy with 0.1% ruthenium.[54] Ruthenium is also used in some advanced high-temperature single-crystal superalloys, with applications that include the turbines in jet engines. Several nickel based superalloy compositions are described, such as EPM-102 (with 3% Ru), TMS-162 (with 6% Ru), TMS-138,[55] and TMS-174,[56][57] the latter two containing 6% rhenium.[58] Fountain pen nibs are frequently tipped with ruthenium alloy. From 1944 onward, the Parker 51 fountain pen was fitted with the "RU" nib, a 14K gold nib tipped with 96.2% ruthenium and 3.8% iridium.[59]

Ruthenium is a component of mixed-metal oxide (MMO) anodes used for cathodic protection of underground and submerged structures, and for electrolytic cells for such processes as generating chlorine from salt water.[60] The fluorescence of some ruthenium complexes is quenched by oxygen, finding use in optode sensors for oxygen.[61] Ruthenium red, [(NH3)5Ru-O-Ru(NH3)4-O-Ru(NH3)5]6+, is a biological stain used to stain polyanionic molecules such as pectin and nucleic acids for light microscopy and electron microscopy.[62] The beta-decaying isotope 106 of ruthenium is used in radiotherapy of eye tumors, mainly malignant melanomas of the uvea.[63] Ruthenium-centered complexes are being researched for possible anticancer properties.[64] Compared with platinum complexes, those of ruthenium show greater resistance to hydrolysis and more selective action on tumors.[citation needed]

Ruthenium tetroxide exposes latent fingerprints by reacting on contact with fatty oils or fats with sebaceous contaminants and producing brown/black ruthenium dioxide pigment.[65]

 
Halloysite nanotubes intercalated with ruthenium catalytic nanoparticles.[66]

Electronics

Electronics is the largest use of ruthenium.[21] Ru metal is particularly nonvolatile, which is advantageous in microelectronic devices. Ru and its main oxide RuO2 have comparable electrical resistivities.[67] Copper can be directly electroplated onto ruthenium,[68] particular applications include barrier layers, transistor gates, and interconnects.[69] Ru films can be deposited by chemical vapor deposition using volatile complexes such as ruthenium tetroxide and the organoruthenium compound (cyclohexadiene)Ru(CO)3.[70]

Catalysis

Many ruthenium-containing compounds exhibit useful catalytic properties. The catalysts are conveniently divided into those that are soluble in the reaction medium, homogeneous catalysts, and those that are not, which are called heterogeneous catalysts.

Homogeneous catalysis

Solutions containing ruthenium trichloride are highly active for olefin metathesis. Such catalysts are used commercially for the production of polynorbornene for example.[71] Well defined ruthenium carbene and alkylidene complexes show similar reactivity but are only used on small-scale.[72] The Grubbs' catalysts for example have been employed in the preparation of drugs and advanced materials.

 
RuCl3-catalyzed ring-opening metathesis polymerization reaction giving polynorbornene..

Ruthenium complexes are highly active catalysts for transfer hydrogenations (sometimes referred to as "borrowing hydrogen" reactions). Chiral ruthenium complexes, introduced by Ryoji Noyori, are employed for the enantioselective hydrogenation of ketones, aldehydes, and imines.[73] A typical catalyst is (cymene)Ru(S,S-TsDPEN):[74][75]

 
[RuCl(S,S-TsDPEN)(cymene)]-catalysed (R,R)-hydrobenzoin synthesis (yield 100%, ee >99%)

A Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded in 2001 to Ryōji Noyori for contributions to the field of asymmetric hydrogenation.

Heterogeneous catalysis

Ruthenium-promoted cobalt catalysts are used in Fischer-Tropsch synthesis.[76]

Emerging applications

Some ruthenium complexes absorb light throughout the visible spectrum and are being actively researched for solar energy technologies. For example, ruthenium-based compounds have been used for light absorption in dye-sensitized solar cells, a promising new low-cost solar cell system.[77]

Many ruthenium-based oxides show very unusual properties, such as a quantum critical point behavior,[78] exotic superconductivity (in its strontium ruthenate form),[79] and high-temperature ferromagnetism.[80]

Health effects

Little is known about the health effects of ruthenium[81] and it is relatively rare for people to encounter ruthenium compounds.[82] Metallic ruthenium is inert (is not chemically reactive).[81] Some compounds such as ruthenium oxide (RuO4) are highly toxic and volatile.[82]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c It was common to give newly discovered elements Latin names (for example, lutetium and hafnium, both discovered in early 20th century, are named after the Latin names for Paris and Copenhagen). Claus chose to name the element "in Honour of my Motherland",[4] and Claus was a Russian subject; as such, he chose the Latin name for Russia used back in the day, Ruthenia, as the basis for his name.[5]
    In contemporary Latin (as well as in contemporary English), Russia is usually referred to as Russia, and the name Ruthenia stands for a region in and around Zakarpattia Oblast in western Ukraine.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Standard Atomic Weights: Ruthenium". CIAAW. 1983.
  2. ^ "Ruthenium: ruthenium(I) fluoride compound data". OpenMOPAC.net. Retrieved 10 December 2007.
  3. ^ a b Haynes, p. 4.130
  4. ^ Matthey, Johnson. "The Discovery of Ruthenium". Johnson Matthey Technology Review. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Pitchkov, V. N. (1996). "The Discovery of Ruthenium". Platinum Metals Review. 40 (4): 181–188.
  6. ^ Summary. Ruthenium. platinum.matthey.com, p. 9 (2009)
  7. ^ PGM Market Report. platinum.matthey.com, p. 30 (May 2018)
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Haynes, p. 4.31
  9. ^ Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1076
  10. ^ Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1078
  11. ^ Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1075
  12. ^ a b Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1074
  13. ^ Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1077
  14. ^ a b c Lide, D. R., ed. (2005). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (86th ed.). Boca Raton (FL): CRC Press. ISBN 0-8493-0486-5. Section 11, Table of the Isotopes
  15. ^ a b c Audi, Georges; Bersillon, Olivier; Blachot, Jean; Wapstra, Aaldert Hendrik (2003), "The NUBASE evaluation of nuclear and decay properties", Nuclear Physics A, 729: 3–128, Bibcode:2003NuPhA.729....3A, doi:10.1016/j.nuclphysa.2003.11.001
  16. ^ Masson, O.; Steinhauser, G.; Zok, D.; Saunier, O.; Angelov, H.; Babić, D.; Bečková, V.; Bieringer, J.; Bruggeman, M.; Burbidge, C. I.; Conil, S.; Dalheimer, A.; De Geer, L.-E.; De Vismes Ott, A.; Eleftheriadis, K.; Estier, S.; Fischer, H.; Garavaglia, M. G.; Gasco Leonarte, C.; Gorzkiewicz, K.; Hainz, D.; Hoffman, I.; Hýža, M.; Isajenko, K.; Karhunen, T.; Kastlander, J.; Katzlberger, C.; Kierepko, R.; Knetsch, G.-J.; et al. (2019). "Airborne concentrations and chemical considerations of radioactive ruthenium from an undeclared major nuclear release in 2017". PNAS. 116 (34): 16750–16759. Bibcode:2019PNAS..11616750M. doi:10.1073/pnas.1907571116. PMC 6708381. PMID 31350352.
  17. ^ a b c d Emsley, J. (2003). "Ruthenium". Nature's Building Blocks: An A-Z Guide to the Elements. Oxford, England, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 368–370. ISBN 978-0-19-850340-8.
  18. ^ a b Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1071
  19. ^ a b c George, Micheal W. "2006 Minerals Yearbook: Platinum-Group Metals" (PDF). United States Geological Survey USGS. Retrieved 16 September 2008.
  20. ^ a b "Commodity Report: Platinum-Group Metals" (PDF). United States Geological Survey USGS. Retrieved 16 September 2008.
  21. ^ a b c Loferski, Patricia J.; Ghalayini, Zachary T. and Singerling, Sheryl A. (2018) Platinum-group metals. 2016 Minerals Yearbook. USGS. p. 57.3.
  22. ^ Hartman, H. L.; Britton, S. G., eds. (1992). SME mining engineering handbook. Littleton, Colo.: Society for Mining, Metallurgy, and Exploration. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-87335-100-3.
  23. ^ Harris, Donald C.; Cabri, Louis J. (1 August 1973). "The nomenclature of the natural alloys of osmium, iridium and ruthenium based on new compositional data of alloys from world-wide occurrences". The Canadian Mineralogist. 12 (2): 104–112. NAID 20000798606.
  24. ^ Renner, Hermann; Schlamp, Günther; Kleinwächter, Ingo; Drost, Ernst; Lüschow, Hans Martin; Tews, Peter; Panster, Peter; Diehl, Manfred; Lang, Jutta; Kreuzer, Thomas; Knödler, Alfons; Starz, Karl Anton; Dermann, Klaus; Rothaut, Josef; Drieselmann, Ralf; Peter, Catrin; Schiele, Rainer (2001). "Platinum Group Metals and Compounds". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. doi:10.1002/14356007.a21_075. ISBN 978-3-527-30673-2.
  25. ^ Seymour, R. J.; O'Farrelly, J. I. (2001). "Platinum-group metals". Kirk Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology. Wiley. doi:10.1002/0471238961.1612012019052513.a01.pub2. ISBN 978-0471238966.
  26. ^ Gilchrist, Raleigh (1943). "The Platinum Metals". Chemical Reviews. 32 (3): 277–372. doi:10.1021/cr60103a002. S2CID 96640406.
  27. ^ a b c Cotton, Simon (1997). Chemistry of Precious Metals. Springer-Verlag New York, LLC. pp. 1–20. ISBN 978-0-7514-0413-5.
  28. ^ a b Hunt, L. B.; Lever, F. M. (1969). "Platinum Metals: A Survey of Productive Resources to industrial Uses" (PDF). Platinum Metals Review. 13 (4): 126–138.
  29. ^ Swain, Pravati; Mallika, C.; Srinivasan, R.; Mudali, U. Kamachi; Natarajan, R. (November 2013). "Separation and recovery of ruthenium: a review". Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry. 298 (2): 781–796. doi:10.1007/s10967-013-2536-5. S2CID 95804621.
  30. ^ Johal, Sukhraaj Kaur; Boxall, Colin; Gregson, Colin; Steele, Carl (24 July 2015). "Ruthenium Volatilisation from Reprocessed Spent Nuclear Fuel – Studying the Baseline Thermodynamics of Ru(III)" (PDF). ECS Transactions. 66 (21): 31–42. Bibcode:2015ECSTr..66u..31J. doi:10.1149/06621.0031ecst.
  31. ^ Konings, R. J. M.; Conrad, R. (1 September 1999). "Transmutation of technetium – results of the EFTTRA-T2 experiment". Journal of Nuclear Materials. 274 (3): 336–340. Bibcode:1999JNuM..274..336K. doi:10.1016/S0022-3115(99)00107-5.
  32. ^ Peretroukhine, Vladimir; Radchenko, Viacheslav; Kozar', Andrei; Tarasov, Valeriy; Toporov, Iury; Rotmanov, Konstantin; Lebedeva, Lidia; Rovny, Sergey; Ershov, Victor (December 2004). "Technetium transmutation and production of artificial stable ruthenium". Comptes Rendus Chimie. 7 (12): 1215–1218. doi:10.1016/j.crci.2004.05.002.
  33. ^ Swain, P.; Mallika, C.; Srinivasan, R.; Mudali, U. K.; Natarajan, R. (2013). "Separation and recovery of ruthenium: a review". J. Radioanal. Nucl. Chem. 298 (2): 781–796. doi:10.1007/s10967-013-2536-5. S2CID 95804621.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  34. ^ Greenwood, N. N.; & Earnshaw, A. (1997). Chemistry of the Elements (2nd Edn.), Oxford:Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 0-7506-3365-4.
  35. ^ a b Greenwood and Earnshaw, pp. 1080–1
  36. ^ a b Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1082
  37. ^ a b c Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1083
  38. ^ a b Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1084
  39. ^ Hartwig, J. F. (2010) Organotransition Metal Chemistry, from Bonding to Catalysis, University Science Books: New York. ISBN 1-891389-53-X
  40. ^ a b Weeks, Mary Elvira (1932). "The discovery of the elements. VIII. The platinum metals". Journal of Chemical Education. 9 (6): 1017. Bibcode:1932JChEd...9.1017W. doi:10.1021/ed009p1017.
  41. ^ Raub, Christoph J. (2004). "The Minting of Platinum Roubles. Part I: History and Current Investigations". 48 (2): 66–69. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  42. ^ Śniadecki, Jędrzej (1808). Rosprawa o nowym metallu w surowey platynie odkrytym [A case about a new metal in raw platinum discovered] (in Polish). Nakładém i Drukiém Józefa Zawadzkiego. OCLC 739088520.
  43. ^ "New metals in the Uralian platina". The Philosophical Magazine. 2 (11): 391–392. 1 November 1827. doi:10.1080/14786442708674516.
  44. ^ Osann, Gottfried (1829). "Berichtigung, meine Untersuchung des uralschen Platins betreffend". Poggendorffs Annalen der Physik und Chemie. 15: 158. doi:10.1002/andp.18290910119.
  45. ^ Osann, G. (1828). "Fortsetzung der Untersuchung des Platins vom Ural" [Continuation of the study of platinum from the Urals]. Annalen der Physik (in German). 89 (6): 283–297. Bibcode:1828AnP....89..283O. doi:10.1002/andp.18280890609.
  46. ^ Claus, Karl (1845). "О способе добывания чистой платины из руд" [On the method of extracting pure platinum from ores]. Горный журнал (Mining Journal) (in Russian). 7 (3): 157–163.
  47. ^ Meija, Juris (September 2021). "Politics at the periodic table". Nature Chemistry. 13 (9): 814–816. Bibcode:2021NatCh..13..814M. doi:10.1038/s41557-021-00780-5. PMID 34480093. S2CID 237405162.
  48. ^ Rao, C; Trivedi, D. (2005). "Chemical and electrochemical depositions of platinum group metals and their applications". Coordination Chemistry Reviews. 249 (5–6): 613. doi:10.1016/j.ccr.2004.08.015.
  49. ^ Weisberg, A (1999). "Ruthenium plating". Metal Finishing. 97: 297. doi:10.1016/S0026-0576(00)83089-5.
  50. ^ Prepared under the direction of the ASM International Handbook Committee; Merrill L. Minges, technical chairman (1989). Electronic materials handbook. Materials Park, OH: ASM International. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-87170-285-2.
  51. ^ Busana, M. G.; Prudenziati, M.; Hormadaly, J. (2006). "Microstructure development and electrical properties of RuO2-based lead-free thick film resistors". Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Electronics. 17 (11): 951. doi:10.1007/s10854-006-0036-x. hdl:11380/303403. S2CID 135485712.
  52. ^ Rane, Sunit; Prudenziati, Maria; Morten, Bruno (2007). "Environment friendly perovskite ruthenate based thick film resistors". Materials Letters. 61 (2): 595. doi:10.1016/j.matlet.2006.05.015. hdl:11380/307664.
  53. ^ Slade, Paul G., ed. (1999). Electrical contacts : principles and applications. New York, NY: Dekker. pp. 184, 345. ISBN 978-0-8247-1934-0.
  54. ^ Schutz, R. W. (April 1996). "Ruthenium Enhanced Titanium Alloys". Platinum Metals Review. 40 (2): 54–61. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.630.7411.
  55. ^ (PDF). High Temperature Materials Center, National Institute for Materials Science, Japan. July 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 April 2013.
  56. ^ Koizumi, Yutaka; et al. (PDF). Proceedings of the International Gas Turbine Congress, Tokyo 2–7 November 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 January 2014.
  57. ^ Walston, S.; Cetel, A.; MacKay, R.; O'Hara, K.; Duhl, D.; Dreshfield, R. (December 2004). "Joint Development of a Fourth Generation Single Crystal Superalloy" (PDF). NASA.
  58. ^ Bondarenko, Yu. A.; Kablov, E. N.; Surova, V. A.; Echin, A. B. (2006). "Effect of high-gradient directed crystallization on the structure and properties of rhenium-bearing single-crystal alloy". Metal Science and Heat Treatment. 48 (7–8): 360. Bibcode:2006MSHT...48..360B. doi:10.1007/s11041-006-0099-6. S2CID 136907279.
  59. ^ Mottishaw, J. (1999). . The PENnant. XIII (2). Archived from the original on 4 June 2002.
  60. ^ Cardarelli, François (2008). "Dimensionally Stable Anodes (DSA) for Chlorine Evolution". Materials Handbook: A Concise Desktop Reference. London: Springer. pp. 581–582. ISBN 978-1-84628-668-1.
  61. ^ Varney, Mark S. (2000). "Oxygen Microoptode". Chemical sensors in oceanography. Amsterdam: Gordon & Breach. p. 150. ISBN 978-90-5699-255-2.
  62. ^ Hayat, M. A. (1993). "Ruthenium red". Stains and cytochemical methods. New York, NY: Plenum Press. pp. 305–310. ISBN 978-0-306-44294-0.
  63. ^ Wiegel, T. (1997). Radiotherapy of ocular disease, Ausgabe 13020. Basel, Freiburg: Karger. ISBN 978-3-8055-6392-5.
  64. ^ Richards, Adair D.; Rodger, Alison (2007). "Synthetic metallomolecules as agents for the control of DNA structure" (PDF). Chem. Soc. Rev. 36 (3): 471–483. doi:10.1039/b609495c. PMID 17325786.
  65. ^ NCJRS Abstract – National Criminal Justice Reference Service. Ncjrs.gov. Retrieved on 2017-02-28.
  66. ^ Vinokurov, Vladimir A.; Stavitskaya, Anna V.; Chudakov, Yaroslav A.; Ivanov, Evgenii V.; Shrestha, Lok Kumar; Ariga, Katsuhiko; Darrat, Yusuf A.; Lvov, Yuri M. (2017). "Formation of metal clusters in halloysite clay nanotubes". Science and Technology of Advanced Materials. 18 (1): 147–151. Bibcode:2017STAdM..18..147V. doi:10.1080/14686996.2016.1278352. PMC 5402758. PMID 28458738.
  67. ^ Kwon, Oh-Kyum; Kim, Jae-Hoon; Park, Hyoung-Sang; Kang, Sang-Won (2004). "Atomic Layer Deposition of Ruthenium Thin Films for Copper Glue Layer". Journal of the Electrochemical Society. 151 (2): G109. Bibcode:2004JElS..151G.109K. doi:10.1149/1.1640633.
  68. ^ Moffat, T. P.; Walker, M.; Chen, P. J.; Bonevich, J. E.; Egelhoff, W. F.; Richter, L.; Witt, C.; Aaltonen, T.; Ritala, M.; Leskelä, M.; Josell, D. (2006). "Electrodeposition of Cu on Ru Barrier Layers for Damascene Processing". Journal of the Electrochemical Society. 153 (1): C37. Bibcode:2006JElS..153C..37M. doi:10.1149/1.2131826.
  69. ^ Bernasconi, R.; Magagnin, L. (2019). "Review—Ruthenium as Diffusion Barrier Layer in Electronic Interconnects: Current Literature with a Focus on Electrochemical Deposition Methods". Journal of the Electrochemical Society. 166 (1): D3219–D3225. Bibcode:2019JElS..166D3219B. doi:10.1149/2.0281901jes. S2CID 104430143.
  70. ^ Vasilyev, V. Yu. (2010). "Low-temperature pulsed CVD of ruthenium thin films for micro- and nanoelectronic applications, Part 1: Equipment and methodology". Russian Microelectronics. 39: 26–33. doi:10.1134/S106373971001004X. S2CID 122854468.
  71. ^ Delaude, Lionel and Noels, Alfred F. (2005). "Metathesis". Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/0471238961.metanoel.a01. ISBN 978-0471238966.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  72. ^ Fürstner, Alois (2000). "Olefin Metathesis and Beyond". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 39 (17): 3012–3043. doi:10.1002/1521-3773(20000901)39:17<3012::AID-ANIE3012>3.0.CO;2-G. PMID 11028025.
  73. ^ Noyori, R.; Ohkuma, T.; Kitamura, M.; Takaya, H.; Sayo, N.; Kumobayashi, H.; Akutagawa, S. (1987), "Asymmetric hydrogenation of .beta.-keto carboxylic esters. A practical, purely chemical access to .beta.-hydroxy esters in high enantiomeric purity", Journal of the American Chemical Society, 109 (19): 5856, doi:10.1021/ja00253a051
  74. ^ Ikariya, Takao; Hashiguchi, Shohei; Murata, Kunihiko and Noyori, Ryōji (2005). "Preparation of Optically Active (R,R)-Hydrobenzoin from Benzoin or Benzil". Organic Syntheses: 10.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  75. ^ Chen, Fei (2015). "Synthesis of Optically Active 1,2,3,4-Tetrahydroquinolines via Asymmetric Hydrogenation Using Iridium-Diamine Catalyst". Org. Synth. 92: 213–226. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.092.0213.
  76. ^ Schulz, Hans (1999). "Short history and present trends of Fischer–Tropsch synthesis". Applied Catalysis A: General. 186 (1–2): 3–12. doi:10.1016/S0926-860X(99)00160-X.
  77. ^ Kuang, Daibin; Ito, Seigo; Wenger, Bernard; Klein, Cedric; Moser, Jacques-E; Humphry-Baker, Robin; Zakeeruddin, Shaik M.; Grätzel, Michael (2006). "High Molar Extinction Coefficient Heteroleptic Ruthenium Complexes for Thin Film Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 128 (12): 4146–54. doi:10.1021/ja058540p. PMID 16551124. S2CID 39111991.
  78. ^ Perry, R.; Kitagawa, K.; Grigera, S.; Borzi, R.; MacKenzie, A.; Ishida, K.; Maeno, Y. (2004). "Multiple First-Order Metamagnetic Transitions and Quantum Oscillations in Ultrapure Sr.3Ru2O7". Physical Review Letters. 92 (16): 166602. arXiv:cond-mat/0401371. Bibcode:2004PhRvL..92p6602P. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.92.166602. PMID 15169251. S2CID 26241456.
  79. ^ Maeno, Yoshiteru; Rice, T. Maurice; Sigrist, Manfred (2001). "The Intriguing Superconductivity of Strontium Ruthenate" (PDF). Physics Today. 54 (1): 42. Bibcode:2001PhT....54a..42M. doi:10.1063/1.1349611. hdl:2433/49957.
  80. ^ Shlyk, Larysa; Kryukov, Sergiy; Schüpp-Niewa, Barbara; Niewa, Rainer; De Long, Lance E. (2008). "High-Temperature Ferromagnetism and Tunable Semiconductivity of (Ba, Sr)M2±xRu4∓xO11 (M = Fe, Co): A New Paradigm for Spintronics". Advanced Materials. 20 (7): 1315. Bibcode:2008AdM....20.1315S. doi:10.1002/adma.200701951. S2CID 136558050.
  81. ^ a b "Ruthenium". espimetals.com. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
  82. ^ a b "Ruthenium (Ru) - Chemical properties, Health and Environmental effects". lenntech.com. Retrieved 26 July 2020.

Bibliography

External links

ruthenium, confused, with, rubidium, chemical, element, with, symbol, atomic, number, rare, transition, metal, belonging, platinum, group, periodic, table, like, other, metals, platinum, group, ruthenium, inert, most, other, chemicals, russian, born, scientist. Not to be confused with rubidium Ruthenium is a chemical element with the symbol Ru and atomic number 44 It is a rare transition metal belonging to the platinum group of the periodic table Like the other metals of the platinum group ruthenium is inert to most other chemicals Russian born scientist of Baltic German ancestry Karl Ernst Claus discovered the element in 1844 at Kazan State University and named ruthenium in honor of Russia a Ruthenium is usually found as a minor component of platinum ores the annual production has risen from about 19 tonnes in 2009 6 to some 35 5 tonnes in 2017 7 Most ruthenium produced is used in wear resistant electrical contacts and thick film resistors A minor application for ruthenium is in platinum alloys and as a chemistry catalyst A new application of ruthenium is as the capping layer for extreme ultraviolet photomasks Ruthenium is generally found in ores with the other platinum group metals in the Ural Mountains and in North and South America Small but commercially important quantities are also found in pentlandite extracted from Sudbury Ontario and in pyroxenite deposits in South Africa 8 Ruthenium 44RuRutheniumPronunciation r uː ˈ 8 iː n i e m wbr roo THEE nee em Appearancesilvery white metallicStandard atomic weight Ar Ru 101 07 0 02101 07 0 02 abridged 1 Ruthenium in the periodic tableHydrogen HeliumLithium Beryllium Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine NeonSodium Magnesium Aluminium Silicon Phosphorus Sulfur Chlorine ArgonPotassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine KryptonRubidium Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenium Rhodium Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine XenonCaesium Barium Lanthanum Cerium Praseodymium Neodymium Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury element Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium Astatine RadonFrancium Radium Actinium Thorium Protactinium Uranium Neptunium Plutonium Americium Curium Berkelium Californium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Nobelium Lawrencium Rutherfordium Dubnium Seaborgium Bohrium Hassium Meitnerium Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium Nihonium Flerovium Moscovium Livermorium Tennessine Oganesson Fe Ru Ostechnetium ruthenium rhodiumAtomic number Z 44Groupgroup 8Periodperiod 5Block d blockElectron configuration Kr 4d7 5s1Electrons per shell2 8 18 15 1Physical propertiesPhase at STPsolidMelting point2607 K 2334 C 4233 F Boiling point4423 K 4150 C 7502 F Density near r t 12 45 g cm3when liquid at m p 10 65 g cm3Heat of fusion38 59 kJ molHeat of vaporization619 kJ molMolar heat capacity24 06 J mol K Vapor pressureP Pa 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 kat T K 2588 2811 3087 3424 3845 4388Atomic propertiesOxidation states 4 2 0 1 2 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 a mildly acidic oxide ElectronegativityPauling scale 2 2Ionization energies1st 710 2 kJ mol2nd 1620 kJ mol3rd 2747 kJ molAtomic radiusempirical 134 pmCovalent radius146 7 pmSpectral lines of rutheniumOther propertiesNatural occurrenceprimordialCrystal structure hexagonal close packed hcp Speed of sound thin rod5970 m s at 20 C Thermal expansion6 4 µm m K at 25 C Thermal conductivity117 W m K Electrical resistivity71 nW m at 0 C Magnetic orderingparamagnetic 3 Molar magnetic susceptibility 39 10 6 cm3 mol 298 K 3 Young s modulus447 GPaShear modulus173 GPaBulk modulus220 GPaPoisson ratio0 30Mohs hardness6 5Brinell hardness2160 MPaCAS Number7440 18 8HistoryNamingafter Ruthenia the 19th century Latin name for Russia a Discovery and first isolationKarl Ernst Claus 1844 Main isotopes of rutheniumveIso tope Decayabun dance half life t1 2 mode pro duct96Ru 5 54 stable97Ru syn 2 9 d e 97Tcg 98Ru 1 87 stable99Ru 12 76 stable100Ru 12 60 stable101Ru 17 06 stable102Ru 31 55 stable103Ru syn 39 26 d b 103Rhg 104Ru 18 62 stable106Ru syn 373 59 d b 106Rh Category Rutheniumviewtalkedit references Contents 1 Characteristics 1 1 Physical properties 1 2 Chemical properties 1 3 Isotopes 1 4 Occurrence 2 Production 3 Chemical compounds 3 1 Oxides and chalcogenides 3 2 Halides and oxyhalides 3 3 Coordination and organometallic complexes 4 History 5 Applications 5 1 Electronics 5 2 Catalysis 5 2 1 Homogeneous catalysis 5 2 2 Heterogeneous catalysis 5 3 Emerging applications 6 Health effects 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksCharacteristics EditPhysical properties Edit Gas phase grown crystals of ruthenium metal Ruthenium a polyvalent hard white metal is a member of the platinum group and is in group 8 of the periodic table Z Element No of electrons shell26 iron 2 8 14 244 ruthenium 2 8 18 15 176 osmium 2 8 18 32 14 2108 hassium 2 8 18 32 32 14 2Whereas all other group 8 elements have two electrons in the outermost shell in ruthenium the outermost shell has only one electron the final electron is in a lower shell This anomaly is observed in the neighboring metals niobium 41 molybdenum 42 and rhodium 45 Chemical properties Edit Ruthenium has four crystal modifications and does not tarnish at ambient conditions it oxidizes upon heating to 800 C 1 070 K Ruthenium dissolves in fused alkalis to give ruthenates RuO2 4 It is not attacked by acids even aqua regia but is attacked by halogens at high temperatures 8 Indeed ruthenium is most readily attacked by oxidizing agents 9 Small amounts of ruthenium can increase the hardness of platinum and palladium The corrosion resistance of titanium is increased markedly by the addition of a small amount of ruthenium 8 The metal can be plated by electroplating and by thermal decomposition A ruthenium molybdenum alloy is known to be superconductive at temperatures below 10 6 K 8 Ruthenium is the only 4d transition metal that can assume the group oxidation state 8 and even then it is less stable there than the heavier congener osmium this is the first group from the left of the table where the second and third row transition metals display notable differences in chemical behavior Like iron but unlike osmium ruthenium can form aqueous cations in its lower oxidation states of 2 and 3 10 Ruthenium is the first in a downward trend in the melting and boiling points and atomization enthalpy in the 4d transition metals after the maximum seen at molybdenum because the 4d subshell is more than half full and the electrons are contributing less to metallic bonding Technetium the previous element has an exceptionally low value that is off the trend due to its half filled Kr 4d55s2 configuration though it is not as far off the trend in the 4d series as manganese in the 3d transition series 11 Unlike the lighter congener iron ruthenium is paramagnetic at room temperature as iron also is above its Curie point 12 The reduction potentials in acidic aqueous solution for some common ruthenium ions are shown below 13 0 455 V Ru2 2e Ru0 249 V Ru3 e Ru2 1 120 V RuO2 4H 2e Ru2 2H2O1 563 V RuO2 4 8H 4e Ru2 4H2O1 368 V RuO 4 8H 5e Ru2 4H2O1 387 V RuO4 4H 4e RuO2 2H2OIsotopes Edit Main article Isotopes of ruthenium Naturally occurring ruthenium is composed of seven stable isotopes Additionally 34 radioactive isotopes have been discovered Of these radioisotopes the most stable are 106Ru with a half life of 373 59 days 103Ru with a half life of 39 26 days and 97Ru with a half life of 2 9 days 14 15 Fifteen other radioisotopes have been characterized with atomic weights ranging from 89 93 u 90Ru to 114 928 u 115Ru Most of these have half lives that are less than five minutes except 95Ru half life 1 643 hours and 105Ru half life 4 44 hours 14 15 The primary decay mode before the most abundant isotope 102Ru is electron capture and the primary mode after is beta emission The primary decay product before 102Ru is technetium and the primary decay product after is rhodium 14 15 106Ru is a product of fission of a nucleus of uranium or plutonium High concentrations of detected atmospheric 106Ru were associated with an alleged undeclared nuclear accident in Russia in 2017 16 Occurrence Edit See also Category Ruthenium minerals As the 78th most abundant element in Earth s crust ruthenium is relatively rare 17 found in about 100 parts per trillion 18 This element is generally found in ores with the other platinum group metals in the Ural Mountains and in North and South America Small but commercially important quantities are also found in pentlandite extracted from Sudbury Ontario Canada and in pyroxenite deposits in South Africa The native form of ruthenium is a very rare mineral Ir replaces part of Ru in its structure 19 20 Ruthenium has a relatively high fission product yield in nuclear fission and given that its most long lived radioisotope has a half life of only around a year there are often proposals to recover ruthenium in a new kind of nuclear reprocessing from spent fuel An unusual ruthenium deposit can also be found at the natural nuclear fission reactor that was active in Oklo Gabon some two billion years ago Indeed the isotope ratio of ruthenium found there was one of several ways used to confirm that a nuclear fission chain reaction had indeed occurred at that site in the geological past Uranium is no longer mined at Oklo and there have never been serious attempts to recover any of the platinum group metals present there Production EditRoughly 30 tonnes of ruthenium are mined each year 21 with world reserves estimated at 5 000 tonnes 17 The composition of the mined platinum group metal PGM mixtures varies widely depending on the geochemical formation For example the PGMs mined in South Africa contain on average 11 ruthenium while the PGMs mined in the former USSR contain only 2 1992 22 23 Ruthenium osmium and iridium are considered the minor platinum group metals 12 Ruthenium like the other platinum group metals is obtained commercially as a by product from nickel and copper and platinum metals ore processing During electrorefining of copper and nickel noble metals such as silver gold and the platinum group metals precipitate as anode mud the feedstock for the extraction 19 20 The metals are converted to ionized solutes by any of several methods depending on the composition of the feedstock One representative method is fusion with sodium peroxide followed by dissolution in aqua regia and solution in a mixture of chlorine with hydrochloric acid 24 25 Osmium ruthenium rhodium and iridium are insoluble in aqua regia and readily precipitate leaving the other metals in solution Rhodium is separated from the residue by treatment with molten sodium bisulfate The insoluble residue containing Ru Os and Ir is treated with sodium oxide in which Ir is insoluble producing dissolved Ru and Os salts After oxidation to the volatile oxides RuO4 is separated from OsO4 by precipitation of NH4 3RuCl6 with ammonium chloride or by distillation or extraction with organic solvents of the volatile osmium tetroxide 26 Hydrogen is used to reduce ammonium ruthenium chloride yielding a powder 8 27 The product is reduced using hydrogen yielding the metal as a powder or sponge metal that can be treated with powder metallurgy techniques or argon arc welding 8 28 Ruthenium is contained in spent nuclear fuel both as a direct fission product and as a product of neutron absorption by long lived fission product 99 Tc After allowing the unstable isotopes of ruthenium to decay chemical extraction could yield ruthenium for use or sale in all applications ruthenium is otherwise used for 29 30 Ruthenium can also be produced by deliberate nuclear transmutation from 99 Tc Given the relatively long half life high fission product yield and high chemical mobility in the environment 99 Tc is among the most often proposed non actinides for commercial scale nuclear transmutation 99 Tc has a relatively big neutron cross section and given that Technetium has no stable isotopes a sample would not run into the problem of neutron activation of stable isotopes Significant amounts of 99 Tc are produced both by nuclear fission and nuclear medicine which makes ample use of 99m Tc which decays to 99 Tc Exposing the 99 Tc target to strong enough neutron radiation will eventually yield appreciable quantities of Ruthenium which can be chemically separated and sold while consuming 99 Tc 31 32 Chemical compounds EditSee also Category Ruthenium compounds The oxidation states of ruthenium range from 0 to 8 and 2 The properties of ruthenium and osmium compounds are often similar The 2 3 and 4 states are the most common The most prevalent precursor is ruthenium trichloride a red solid that is poorly defined chemically but versatile synthetically 27 Oxides and chalcogenides Edit Ruthenium can be oxidized to ruthenium IV oxide RuO2 oxidation state 4 which can in turn be oxidized by sodium metaperiodate to the volatile yellow tetrahedral ruthenium tetroxide RuO4 an aggressive strong oxidizing agent with structure and properties analogous to osmium tetroxide RuO4 is mostly used as an intermediate in the purification of ruthenium from ores and radiowastes 33 Dipotassium ruthenate K2RuO4 6 and potassium perruthenate KRuO4 7 are also known 34 Unlike osmium tetroxide ruthenium tetroxide is less stable is strong enough as an oxidising agent to oxidise dilute hydrochloric acid and organic solvents like ethanol at room temperature and is easily reduced to ruthenate RuO2 4 in aqueous alkaline solutions it decomposes to form the dioxide above 100 C Unlike iron but like osmium ruthenium does not form oxides in its lower 2 and 3 oxidation states 35 Ruthenium forms dichalcogenides which are diamagnetic semiconductors crystallizing in the pyrite structure 35 Ruthenium sulfide RuS2 occurs naturally as the mineral laurite Like iron ruthenium does not readily form oxoanions and prefers to achieve high coordination numbers with hydroxide ions instead Ruthenium tetroxide is reduced by cold dilute potassium hydroxide to form black potassium perruthenate KRuO4 with ruthenium in the 7 oxidation state Potassium perruthenate can also be produced by oxidising potassium ruthenate K2RuO4 with chlorine gas The perruthenate ion is unstable and is reduced by water to form the orange ruthenate Potassium ruthenate may be synthesized by reacting ruthenium metal with molten potassium hydroxide and potassium nitrate 36 Some mixed oxides are also known such as MIIRuIVO3 Na3RuVO4 Na2 RuV2 O7 and MII2 LnIII RuV O6 36 Halides and oxyhalides Edit The highest known ruthenium halide is the hexafluoride a dark brown solid that melts at 54 C It hydrolyzes violently upon contact with water and easily disproportionates to form a mixture of lower ruthenium fluorides releasing fluorine gas Ruthenium pentafluoride is a tetrameric dark green solid that is also readily hydrolyzed melting at 86 5 C The yellow ruthenium tetrafluoride is probably also polymeric and can be formed by reducing the pentafluoride with iodine Among the binary compounds of ruthenium these high oxidation states are known only in the oxides and fluorides 37 Ruthenium trichloride is a well known compound existing in a black a form and a dark brown b form the trihydrate is red 38 Of the known trihalides trifluoride is dark brown and decomposes above 650 C tribromide is dark brown and decomposes above 400 C and triiodide is black 37 Of the dihalides difluoride is not known dichloride is brown dibromide is black and diiodide is blue 37 The only known oxyhalide is the pale green ruthenium VI oxyfluoride RuOF4 38 Coordination and organometallic complexes Edit Main article Organoruthenium chemistry Tris bipyridine ruthenium II chloride Grubbs catalyst which earned a Nobel Prize for its inventor is used in alkene metathesis reactions Ruthenium forms a variety of coordination complexes Examples are the many pentaammine derivatives Ru NH3 5L n that often exist for both Ru II and Ru III Derivatives of bipyridine and terpyridine are numerous best known being the luminescent tris bipyridine ruthenium II chloride Ruthenium forms a wide range compounds with carbon ruthenium bonds Grubbs catalyst is used for alkene metathesis 39 Ruthenocene is analogous to ferrocene structurally but exhibits distinctive redox properties The colorless liquid ruthenium pentacarbonyl converts in the absence of CO pressure to the dark red solid triruthenium dodecacarbonyl Ruthenium trichloride reacts with carbon monoxide to give many derivatives including RuHCl CO PPh3 3 and Ru CO 2 PPh3 3 Roper s complex Heating solutions of ruthenium trichloride in alcohols with triphenylphosphine gives tris triphenylphosphine ruthenium dichloride RuCl2 PPh3 3 which converts to the hydride complex chlorohydridotris triphenylphosphine ruthenium II RuHCl PPh3 3 27 History EditThough naturally occurring platinum alloys containing all six platinum group metals were used for a long time by pre Columbian Americans and known as a material to European chemists from the mid 16th century not until the mid 18th century was platinum identified as a pure element That natural platinum contained palladium rhodium osmium and iridium was discovered in the first decade of the 19th century 40 Platinum in alluvial sands of Russian rivers gave access to raw material for use in plates and medals and for the minting of ruble coins starting in 1828 41 Residues from platinum production for coinage were available in the Russian Empire and therefore most of the research on them was done in Eastern Europe It is possible that the Polish chemist Jedrzej Sniadecki isolated element 44 which he called vestium after the asteroid Vesta discovered shortly before from South American platinum ores in 1807 He published an announcement of his discovery in 1808 42 His work was never confirmed however and he later withdrew his claim of discovery 17 Jons Berzelius and Gottfried Osann nearly discovered ruthenium in 1827 43 They examined residues that were left after dissolving crude platinum from the Ural Mountains in aqua regia Berzelius did not find any unusual metals but Osann thought he found three new metals which he called pluranium ruthenium and polinium 8 This discrepancy led to a long standing controversy between Berzelius and Osann about the composition of the residues 5 As Osann was not able to repeat his isolation of ruthenium he eventually relinquished his claims 5 44 The name ruthenium was chosen by Osann because the analysed samples stemmed from the Ural Mountains in Russia 45 The name itself derives from the Latin word Ruthenia this word was used at the time as the Latin name for Russia 5 a In 1844 Karl Ernst Claus a Russian scientist of Baltic German descent showed that the compounds prepared by Gottfried Osann contained small amounts of ruthenium which Claus had discovered the same year 8 40 Claus isolated ruthenium from the platinum residues of rouble production while he was working in Kazan University Kazan 5 the same way its heavier congener osmium had been discovered four decades earlier 18 Claus showed that ruthenium oxide contained a new metal and obtained 6 grams of ruthenium from the part of crude platinum that is insoluble in aqua regia 5 Choosing the name for the new element Claus stated I named the new body in honour of my Motherland ruthenium I had every right to call it by this name because Mr Osann relinquished his ruthenium and the word does not yet exist in chemistry 5 46 In doing so Claus started a trend that continues to this day naming an element after a country 47 Applications EditApproximately 30 9 tonnes of ruthenium were consumed in 2016 13 8 of them in electrical applications 7 7 in catalysis and 4 6 in electrochemistry 21 Because it hardens platinum and palladium alloys ruthenium is used in electrical contacts where a thin film is sufficient to achieve the desired durability With its similar properties to and lower cost than rhodium 28 electric contacts are a major use of ruthenium 19 48 The ruthenium plate is applied to the electrical contact and electrode base metal by electroplating 49 or sputtering 50 Ruthenium dioxide with lead and bismuth ruthenates are used in thick film chip resistors 51 52 53 These two electronic applications account for 50 of the ruthenium consumption 17 Ruthenium is seldom alloyed with metals outside the platinum group where small quantities improve some properties The added corrosion resistance in titanium alloys led to the development of a special alloy with 0 1 ruthenium 54 Ruthenium is also used in some advanced high temperature single crystal superalloys with applications that include the turbines in jet engines Several nickel based superalloy compositions are described such as EPM 102 with 3 Ru TMS 162 with 6 Ru TMS 138 55 and TMS 174 56 57 the latter two containing 6 rhenium 58 Fountain pen nibs are frequently tipped with ruthenium alloy From 1944 onward the Parker 51 fountain pen was fitted with the RU nib a 14K gold nib tipped with 96 2 ruthenium and 3 8 iridium 59 Ruthenium is a component of mixed metal oxide MMO anodes used for cathodic protection of underground and submerged structures and for electrolytic cells for such processes as generating chlorine from salt water 60 The fluorescence of some ruthenium complexes is quenched by oxygen finding use in optode sensors for oxygen 61 Ruthenium red NH3 5Ru O Ru NH3 4 O Ru NH3 5 6 is a biological stain used to stain polyanionic molecules such as pectin and nucleic acids for light microscopy and electron microscopy 62 The beta decaying isotope 106 of ruthenium is used in radiotherapy of eye tumors mainly malignant melanomas of the uvea 63 Ruthenium centered complexes are being researched for possible anticancer properties 64 Compared with platinum complexes those of ruthenium show greater resistance to hydrolysis and more selective action on tumors citation needed Ruthenium tetroxide exposes latent fingerprints by reacting on contact with fatty oils or fats with sebaceous contaminants and producing brown black ruthenium dioxide pigment 65 Halloysite nanotubes intercalated with ruthenium catalytic nanoparticles 66 Electronics Edit Electronics is the largest use of ruthenium 21 Ru metal is particularly nonvolatile which is advantageous in microelectronic devices Ru and its main oxide RuO2 have comparable electrical resistivities 67 Copper can be directly electroplated onto ruthenium 68 particular applications include barrier layers transistor gates and interconnects 69 Ru films can be deposited by chemical vapor deposition using volatile complexes such as ruthenium tetroxide and the organoruthenium compound cyclohexadiene Ru CO 3 70 Catalysis Edit Many ruthenium containing compounds exhibit useful catalytic properties The catalysts are conveniently divided into those that are soluble in the reaction medium homogeneous catalysts and those that are not which are called heterogeneous catalysts Homogeneous catalysis Edit Solutions containing ruthenium trichloride are highly active for olefin metathesis Such catalysts are used commercially for the production of polynorbornene for example 71 Well defined ruthenium carbene and alkylidene complexes show similar reactivity but are only used on small scale 72 The Grubbs catalysts for example have been employed in the preparation of drugs and advanced materials RuCl3 catalyzed ring opening metathesis polymerization reaction giving polynorbornene Ruthenium complexes are highly active catalysts for transfer hydrogenations sometimes referred to as borrowing hydrogen reactions Chiral ruthenium complexes introduced by Ryoji Noyori are employed for the enantioselective hydrogenation of ketones aldehydes and imines 73 A typical catalyst is cymene Ru S S TsDPEN 74 75 RuCl S S TsDPEN cymene catalysed R R hydrobenzoin synthesis yield 100 ee gt 99 A Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded in 2001 to Ryōji Noyori for contributions to the field of asymmetric hydrogenation Heterogeneous catalysis Edit Ruthenium promoted cobalt catalysts are used in Fischer Tropsch synthesis 76 Emerging applications Edit Some ruthenium complexes absorb light throughout the visible spectrum and are being actively researched for solar energy technologies For example ruthenium based compounds have been used for light absorption in dye sensitized solar cells a promising new low cost solar cell system 77 Many ruthenium based oxides show very unusual properties such as a quantum critical point behavior 78 exotic superconductivity in its strontium ruthenate form 79 and high temperature ferromagnetism 80 Health effects EditLittle is known about the health effects of ruthenium 81 and it is relatively rare for people to encounter ruthenium compounds 82 Metallic ruthenium is inert is not chemically reactive 81 Some compounds such as ruthenium oxide RuO4 are highly toxic and volatile 82 See also EditAirborne radioactivity increase in Europe in autumn 2017Notes Edit a b c It was common to give newly discovered elements Latin names for example lutetium and hafnium both discovered in early 20th century are named after the Latin names for Paris and Copenhagen Claus chose to name the element in Honour of my Motherland 4 and Claus was a Russian subject as such he chose the Latin name for Russia used back in the day Ruthenia as the basis for his name 5 In contemporary Latin as well as in contemporary English Russia is usually referred to as Russia and the name Ruthenia stands for a region in and around Zakarpattia Oblast in western Ukraine citation needed References Edit Standard Atomic Weights Ruthenium CIAAW 1983 Ruthenium ruthenium I fluoride compound data OpenMOPAC net Retrieved 10 December 2007 a b Haynes p 4 130 Matthey Johnson The Discovery of Ruthenium Johnson Matthey Technology Review Retrieved 25 August 2020 a b c d e f g Pitchkov V N 1996 The Discovery of Ruthenium Platinum Metals Review 40 4 181 188 Summary Ruthenium platinum matthey com p 9 2009 PGM Market Report platinum matthey com p 30 May 2018 a b c d e f g h Haynes p 4 31 Greenwood and Earnshaw p 1076 Greenwood and Earnshaw p 1078 Greenwood and Earnshaw p 1075 a b Greenwood and Earnshaw p 1074 Greenwood and Earnshaw p 1077 a b c Lide D R ed 2005 CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics 86th ed Boca Raton FL CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 0486 5 Section 11 Table of the Isotopes a b c Audi Georges Bersillon Olivier Blachot Jean Wapstra Aaldert Hendrik 2003 The NUBASE evaluation of nuclear and decay properties Nuclear Physics A 729 3 128 Bibcode 2003NuPhA 729 3A doi 10 1016 j nuclphysa 2003 11 001 Masson O Steinhauser G Zok D Saunier O Angelov H Babic D Beckova V Bieringer J Bruggeman M Burbidge C I Conil S Dalheimer A De Geer L E De Vismes Ott A Eleftheriadis K Estier S Fischer H Garavaglia M G Gasco Leonarte C Gorzkiewicz K Hainz D Hoffman I Hyza M Isajenko K Karhunen T Kastlander J Katzlberger C Kierepko R Knetsch G J et al 2019 Airborne concentrations and chemical considerations of radioactive ruthenium from an undeclared major nuclear release in 2017 PNAS 116 34 16750 16759 Bibcode 2019PNAS 11616750M doi 10 1073 pnas 1907571116 PMC 6708381 PMID 31350352 a b c d Emsley J 2003 Ruthenium Nature s Building Blocks An A Z Guide to the Elements Oxford England UK Oxford University Press pp 368 370 ISBN 978 0 19 850340 8 a b Greenwood and Earnshaw p 1071 a b c George Micheal W 2006 Minerals Yearbook Platinum Group Metals PDF United States Geological Survey USGS Retrieved 16 September 2008 a b Commodity Report Platinum Group Metals PDF United States Geological Survey USGS Retrieved 16 September 2008 a b c Loferski Patricia J Ghalayini Zachary T and Singerling Sheryl A 2018 Platinum group metals 2016 Minerals Yearbook USGS p 57 3 Hartman H L Britton S G eds 1992 SME mining engineering handbook Littleton Colo Society for Mining Metallurgy and Exploration p 69 ISBN 978 0 87335 100 3 Harris Donald C Cabri Louis J 1 August 1973 The nomenclature of the natural alloys of osmium iridium and ruthenium based on new compositional data of alloys from world wide occurrences The Canadian Mineralogist 12 2 104 112 NAID 20000798606 Renner Hermann Schlamp Gunther Kleinwachter Ingo Drost Ernst Luschow Hans Martin Tews Peter Panster Peter Diehl Manfred Lang Jutta Kreuzer Thomas Knodler Alfons Starz Karl Anton Dermann Klaus Rothaut Josef Drieselmann Ralf Peter Catrin Schiele Rainer 2001 Platinum Group Metals and Compounds Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry doi 10 1002 14356007 a21 075 ISBN 978 3 527 30673 2 Seymour R J O Farrelly J I 2001 Platinum group metals Kirk Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology Wiley doi 10 1002 0471238961 1612012019052513 a01 pub2 ISBN 978 0471238966 Gilchrist Raleigh 1943 The Platinum Metals Chemical Reviews 32 3 277 372 doi 10 1021 cr60103a002 S2CID 96640406 a b c Cotton Simon 1997 Chemistry of Precious Metals Springer Verlag New York LLC pp 1 20 ISBN 978 0 7514 0413 5 a b Hunt L B Lever F M 1969 Platinum Metals A Survey of Productive Resources to industrial Uses PDF Platinum Metals Review 13 4 126 138 Swain Pravati Mallika C Srinivasan R Mudali U Kamachi Natarajan R November 2013 Separation and recovery of ruthenium a review Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry 298 2 781 796 doi 10 1007 s10967 013 2536 5 S2CID 95804621 Johal Sukhraaj Kaur Boxall Colin Gregson Colin Steele Carl 24 July 2015 Ruthenium Volatilisation from Reprocessed Spent Nuclear Fuel Studying the Baseline Thermodynamics of Ru III PDF ECS Transactions 66 21 31 42 Bibcode 2015ECSTr 66u 31J doi 10 1149 06621 0031ecst Konings R J M Conrad R 1 September 1999 Transmutation of technetium results of the EFTTRA T2 experiment Journal of Nuclear Materials 274 3 336 340 Bibcode 1999JNuM 274 336K doi 10 1016 S0022 3115 99 00107 5 Peretroukhine Vladimir Radchenko Viacheslav Kozar Andrei Tarasov Valeriy Toporov Iury Rotmanov Konstantin Lebedeva Lidia Rovny Sergey Ershov Victor December 2004 Technetium transmutation and production of artificial stable ruthenium Comptes Rendus Chimie 7 12 1215 1218 doi 10 1016 j crci 2004 05 002 Swain P Mallika C Srinivasan R Mudali U K Natarajan R 2013 Separation and recovery of ruthenium a review J Radioanal Nucl Chem 298 2 781 796 doi 10 1007 s10967 013 2536 5 S2CID 95804621 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Greenwood N N amp Earnshaw A 1997 Chemistry of the Elements 2nd Edn Oxford Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 0 7506 3365 4 a b Greenwood and Earnshaw pp 1080 1 a b Greenwood and Earnshaw p 1082 a b c Greenwood and Earnshaw p 1083 a b Greenwood and Earnshaw p 1084 Hartwig J F 2010 Organotransition Metal Chemistry from Bonding to Catalysis University Science Books New York ISBN 1 891389 53 X a b Weeks Mary Elvira 1932 The discovery of the elements VIII The platinum metals Journal of Chemical Education 9 6 1017 Bibcode 1932JChEd 9 1017W doi 10 1021 ed009p1017 Raub Christoph J 2004 The Minting of Platinum Roubles Part I History and Current Investigations 48 2 66 69 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Archive Sniadecki Jedrzej 1808 Rosprawa o nowym metallu w surowey platynie odkrytym A case about a new metal in raw platinum discovered in Polish Nakladem i Drukiem Jozefa Zawadzkiego OCLC 739088520 New metals in the Uralian platina The Philosophical Magazine 2 11 391 392 1 November 1827 doi 10 1080 14786442708674516 Osann Gottfried 1829 Berichtigung meine Untersuchung des uralschen Platins betreffend Poggendorffs Annalen der Physik und Chemie 15 158 doi 10 1002 andp 18290910119 Osann G 1828 Fortsetzung der Untersuchung des Platins vom Ural Continuation of the study of platinum from the Urals Annalen der Physik in German 89 6 283 297 Bibcode 1828AnP 89 283O doi 10 1002 andp 18280890609 Claus Karl 1845 O sposobe dobyvaniya chistoj platiny iz rud On the method of extracting pure platinum from ores Gornyj zhurnal Mining Journal in Russian 7 3 157 163 Meija Juris September 2021 Politics at the periodic table Nature Chemistry 13 9 814 816 Bibcode 2021NatCh 13 814M doi 10 1038 s41557 021 00780 5 PMID 34480093 S2CID 237405162 Rao C Trivedi D 2005 Chemical and electrochemical depositions of platinum group metals and their applications Coordination Chemistry Reviews 249 5 6 613 doi 10 1016 j ccr 2004 08 015 Weisberg A 1999 Ruthenium plating Metal Finishing 97 297 doi 10 1016 S0026 0576 00 83089 5 Prepared under the direction of the ASM International Handbook Committee Merrill L Minges technical chairman 1989 Electronic materials handbook Materials Park OH ASM International p 184 ISBN 978 0 87170 285 2 Busana M G Prudenziati M Hormadaly J 2006 Microstructure development and electrical properties of RuO2 based lead free thick film resistors Journal of Materials Science Materials in Electronics 17 11 951 doi 10 1007 s10854 006 0036 x hdl 11380 303403 S2CID 135485712 Rane Sunit Prudenziati Maria Morten Bruno 2007 Environment friendly perovskite ruthenate based thick film resistors Materials Letters 61 2 595 doi 10 1016 j matlet 2006 05 015 hdl 11380 307664 Slade Paul G ed 1999 Electrical contacts principles and applications New York NY Dekker pp 184 345 ISBN 978 0 8247 1934 0 Schutz R W April 1996 Ruthenium Enhanced Titanium Alloys Platinum Metals Review 40 2 54 61 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 630 7411 Fourth generation nickel base single crystal superalloy TMS 138 138A PDF High Temperature Materials Center National Institute for Materials Science Japan July 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 18 April 2013 Koizumi Yutaka et al Development of a Next Generation Ni base Single Crystal Superalloy PDF Proceedings of the International Gas Turbine Congress Tokyo 2 7 November 2003 Archived from the original PDF on 10 January 2014 Walston S Cetel A MacKay R O Hara K Duhl D Dreshfield R December 2004 Joint Development of a Fourth Generation Single Crystal Superalloy PDF NASA Bondarenko Yu A Kablov E N Surova V A Echin A B 2006 Effect of high gradient directed crystallization on the structure and properties of rhenium bearing single crystal alloy Metal Science and Heat Treatment 48 7 8 360 Bibcode 2006MSHT 48 360B doi 10 1007 s11041 006 0099 6 S2CID 136907279 Mottishaw J 1999 Notes from the Nib Works Where s the Iridium The PENnant XIII 2 Archived from the original on 4 June 2002 Cardarelli Francois 2008 Dimensionally Stable Anodes DSA for Chlorine Evolution Materials Handbook A Concise Desktop Reference London Springer pp 581 582 ISBN 978 1 84628 668 1 Varney Mark S 2000 Oxygen Microoptode Chemical sensors in oceanography Amsterdam Gordon amp Breach p 150 ISBN 978 90 5699 255 2 Hayat M A 1993 Ruthenium red Stains and cytochemical methods New York NY Plenum Press pp 305 310 ISBN 978 0 306 44294 0 Wiegel T 1997 Radiotherapy of ocular disease Ausgabe 13020 Basel Freiburg Karger ISBN 978 3 8055 6392 5 Richards Adair D Rodger Alison 2007 Synthetic metallomolecules as agents for the control of DNA structure PDF Chem Soc Rev 36 3 471 483 doi 10 1039 b609495c PMID 17325786 NCJRS Abstract National Criminal Justice Reference Service Ncjrs gov Retrieved on 2017 02 28 Vinokurov Vladimir A Stavitskaya Anna V Chudakov Yaroslav A Ivanov Evgenii V Shrestha Lok Kumar Ariga Katsuhiko Darrat Yusuf A Lvov Yuri M 2017 Formation of metal clusters in halloysite clay nanotubes Science and Technology of Advanced Materials 18 1 147 151 Bibcode 2017STAdM 18 147V doi 10 1080 14686996 2016 1278352 PMC 5402758 PMID 28458738 Kwon Oh Kyum Kim Jae Hoon Park Hyoung Sang Kang Sang Won 2004 Atomic Layer Deposition of Ruthenium Thin Films for Copper Glue Layer Journal of the Electrochemical Society 151 2 G109 Bibcode 2004JElS 151G 109K doi 10 1149 1 1640633 Moffat T P Walker M Chen P J Bonevich J E Egelhoff W F Richter L Witt C Aaltonen T Ritala M Leskela M Josell D 2006 Electrodeposition of Cu on Ru Barrier Layers for Damascene Processing Journal of the Electrochemical Society 153 1 C37 Bibcode 2006JElS 153C 37M doi 10 1149 1 2131826 Bernasconi R Magagnin L 2019 Review Ruthenium as Diffusion Barrier Layer in Electronic Interconnects Current Literature with a Focus on Electrochemical Deposition Methods Journal of the Electrochemical Society 166 1 D3219 D3225 Bibcode 2019JElS 166D3219B doi 10 1149 2 0281901jes S2CID 104430143 Vasilyev V Yu 2010 Low temperature pulsed CVD of ruthenium thin films for micro and nanoelectronic applications Part 1 Equipment and methodology Russian Microelectronics 39 26 33 doi 10 1134 S106373971001004X S2CID 122854468 Delaude Lionel and Noels Alfred F 2005 Metathesis Kirk Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology Weinheim Wiley VCH doi 10 1002 0471238961 metanoel a01 ISBN 978 0471238966 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Furstner Alois 2000 Olefin Metathesis and Beyond Angewandte Chemie International Edition 39 17 3012 3043 doi 10 1002 1521 3773 20000901 39 17 lt 3012 AID ANIE3012 gt 3 0 CO 2 G PMID 11028025 Noyori R Ohkuma T Kitamura M Takaya H Sayo N Kumobayashi H Akutagawa S 1987 Asymmetric hydrogenation of beta keto carboxylic esters A practical purely chemical access to beta hydroxy esters in high enantiomeric purity Journal of the American Chemical Society 109 19 5856 doi 10 1021 ja00253a051 Ikariya Takao Hashiguchi Shohei Murata Kunihiko and Noyori Ryōji 2005 Preparation of Optically Active R R Hydrobenzoin from Benzoin or Benzil Organic Syntheses 10 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Chen Fei 2015 Synthesis of Optically Active 1 2 3 4 Tetrahydroquinolines via Asymmetric Hydrogenation Using Iridium Diamine Catalyst Org Synth 92 213 226 doi 10 15227 orgsyn 092 0213 Schulz Hans 1999 Short history and present trends of Fischer Tropsch synthesis Applied Catalysis A General 186 1 2 3 12 doi 10 1016 S0926 860X 99 00160 X Kuang Daibin Ito Seigo Wenger Bernard Klein Cedric Moser Jacques E Humphry Baker Robin Zakeeruddin Shaik M Gratzel Michael 2006 High Molar Extinction Coefficient Heteroleptic Ruthenium Complexes for Thin Film Dye Sensitized Solar Cells Journal of the American Chemical Society 128 12 4146 54 doi 10 1021 ja058540p PMID 16551124 S2CID 39111991 Perry R Kitagawa K Grigera S Borzi R MacKenzie A Ishida K Maeno Y 2004 Multiple First Order Metamagnetic Transitions and Quantum Oscillations in Ultrapure Sr 3Ru2O7 Physical Review Letters 92 16 166602 arXiv cond mat 0401371 Bibcode 2004PhRvL 92p6602P doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 92 166602 PMID 15169251 S2CID 26241456 Maeno Yoshiteru Rice T Maurice Sigrist Manfred 2001 The Intriguing Superconductivity of Strontium Ruthenate PDF Physics Today 54 1 42 Bibcode 2001PhT 54a 42M doi 10 1063 1 1349611 hdl 2433 49957 Shlyk Larysa Kryukov Sergiy Schupp Niewa Barbara Niewa Rainer De Long Lance E 2008 High Temperature Ferromagnetism and Tunable Semiconductivity of Ba Sr M2 xRu4 xO11 M Fe Co A New Paradigm for Spintronics Advanced Materials 20 7 1315 Bibcode 2008AdM 20 1315S doi 10 1002 adma 200701951 S2CID 136558050 a b Ruthenium espimetals com Retrieved 26 July 2020 a b Ruthenium Ru Chemical properties Health and Environmental effects lenntech com Retrieved 26 July 2020 Bibliography EditGreenwood Norman N Earnshaw Alan 1997 Chemistry of the Elements 2nd ed Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 08 037941 8 Haynes William M ed 2016 CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics 97th ed CRC Press ISBN 9781498754293 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ruthenium Look up ruthenium in Wiktionary the free dictionary Ruthenium at The Periodic Table of Videos University of Nottingham Nano layer of ruthenium stabilizes magnetic sensors Archived 5 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ruthenium amp oldid 1137860405, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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