TELLURIUM

tĕloorˈēəm [Lat.,=earth], semimetallic chemical element; symbol Te; at. no. 52; at. wt. 127.60; m.p. 450 degrees Celsius; b.p. 990 degrees Celsius; sp. gr. 6.24 at 20 degrees Celsius; valence −2, +4, or +6. Tellurium is a lustrous, brittle, crystalline, silver-white metalloid. A powdery brown form of the element is also known. Tellurium forms many compounds corresponding to those of sulfur and selenium, the elements above it in group VIa of the periodic table. The dioxide, TeO2, is formed when the element is burned in air. Tellurium forms two weak acids and a number of halogen compounds. With hydrogen and with some metals it forms tellurides. Tellurium and its compounds are probably poisonous. Tellurium is occasionally found uncombined in nature but is more often found combined with metals, as in the minerals calaverite (gold telluride) and sylvanite (silver-gold telluride). Tellurium is recovered as a byproduct of the electrolytic refining of blister copper. It is used as an additive to steel and is often alloyed with aluminum, copper, lead, or tin. It is used in vulcanizing rubber, as a coloring agent in glass and ceramics, and in catalysts for petroleum cracking. Tellurium is a semiconductor material and is slightly photosensitive. It is used with bismuth in thermoelectric devices. Tellurium was discovered in 1782 by Franz Muller von Reichenstein. It was named by M. H. Klaproth, who isolated it in 1798.

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

-46778-

Search the Library
Books
Journals
Magazines
Newspapers
Encyclopedia
Advanced Search
About Questia
Questia is the world's largest online academic library offering full-text books, journals, and articles on thousands of topics.

Join Now...
Questia Books and Articles on: Tellurium
We found: 193 results
By media type:
 

Books:

 

154  

 

Journal articles:

 

12  

 

Magazine articles:

 

12  

 

Newspaper articles:

 

6  

 

Encyclopedia articles:

 

9  

 

books on: Tellurium  - 154 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
ABUNDANCE AND SOURCE Tellurium is the seventy-second most abundant element on Earth...other elements, such as sylvanite also known as graphic tellurium , nagyagite, black tellurium, hessite, tetradymite, altaite, coloradoite, and...
TELLURIUM AND IODINE The case of tellurium and iodine is one of only four pair reversals in the periodic...Lothar Meyer all published tables in which the positions of tellurium and iodine had been reversed, well before the appearance of...
...zinn, n. plate pewter. Tellur, n. tellurium; -alkyl, n. alkyl telluride; -blei, n. lead telluride; -erz, n. tellurium ore; -gold, n. gold telluride; -halogen, n. tellurium halide. tellurig, tellurous. Tellur-natrium...
...124 Sulfuryl chloride, construction, 123 Sulfuryl fluoride, construction, 123 Tellurium, C-1, C-2 Tellurium bromide, construction, 117 Tellurium chloride, construction, 117 Tellurium fluorides, construction, 116 Tellurium iodide...
...constituent present in the so-called radio-tellurium of Marckwald. . . . Marckwald has shown that tellurium is merely an impurity, and has devised...The radioactive constituent in radio-tellurium and that in radium E are very analogous...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

journal articles on: Tellurium  - 12 results

       More journal Results: 1-10 11-12 >>  
 
...Symposium on Industrial Uses of Selenium and Tellurium (Carapella SC, Oldfield JE, Palmieri...eds). Grimbergen Belgium:Selenium-Tellurium Development Association, 1994;331...Spain. In: Proceedings of Selenium-Tellurium Development Association, Fifth International...
...QD cores consist of various metal complexes. Cadmium-tellurium (CdTe) and cadmium-selenium (CdSe) cores with zinc sulfide...Tyszkiewicz E, Piechal A, Gajkowska B, Smialek M. 2002. Tellurium-induced cognitive deficits in rats are related to neuropathological...
...my mouth and emit a French horn, or a vase, or a knob of tellurium. It smacks of folly, of first causes. (Dillard, 1982...literal understanding. I ran to the dictionary to learn that tellurium is a naturally occurring element that is combined with other...
...and Van de Wiele 2009). This was demonstrated by the finding of significant volatilization of As, selenium, bismuth, tellurium (Te), and antimony; the formation of highly toxic AsH.sub.3 (arsine) and (CH.sub.3).sub.2 Te (dimethyl...
...surround- rapidly. from a joint-stock company established by admistrative building, and even that was yearly production of tellurium is about 500 kg. ing the plant. So the subcontracting of cer- lack of communications is a major obstacle users and producers...
More journal Results: 1-10 11-12 >>

 

magazine articles on: Tellurium  - 12 results

       More magazine Results: 1-10 11-12 >>  
 
...advanced thin-film solar panels use either tellurium or indium. In each of these cases...are two key questions about neodymium, tellurium, lithium and the 26 other energy-critical...exchange fewer platinum wedding rings. Tellurium provides another example. In addition...
...turbines; and cadmium, indium, and tellurium in photovoltaic solar cells. On the...the processing of zinc ores, and most tellurium is recovered from the processing of copper...permanent magnets Catalysts Phosphors <br/ Tellurium Alloying element Not reported Byproduct...
...growth in solar PV capacity has been. The production of tellurium, an essential component of the most advanced thin...panels, could become a major bottleneck, for example. Tellurium is very scarce, much scarcer even than platinum, and...
...000 Ci, or 4,600 million billion Bq. And .sup.131Te (tellurium) leaves the iodine isotope in the dust, with over a thousand...other much faster--and more radioactive--isotopes than Tellurium 133 with its half-life of 12.4 minutes. So how dangerous...
...selene (the ancient Greek word for "Moon") and is so named because the element was discovered together with the element tellurium, which had already been named for Earth, from the Latin tellus. On January 1, 1801, Italian astronomer Giuseppe Piazzi...
More magazine Results: 1-10 11-12 >>

 

newspaper articles on: Tellurium  - 6 results

       More newspaper Results: 1-6 >>  
 
...photovoltaic cells relies on the rare element tellurium. However, the only tellurium mine that exists on Earth is in China. And China, in part through its control of tellurium, is increasingly dominating the market for...
...cathode) from feeds (copper anode from a Miami, Arizona smelter), slimes (trace amounts of silver, gold, selenium, nad tellurium compounds), copper telluride, nickel carbonate, and copper sulfate. Aside from its rod mills in El Paso, it has rod...
...centuries in the East. The most important constituent of garlic for health preservation is probably allicin although its tellurium may help reduce cholesterol production. Available evidence shows that garlic will help bring down blood pressure, lower...
...president James Garfield; 31 HP Lovecraft; 32 Tequila; 33 Marcel Duchamp; 34 Australias; 35 Magpies; 36 Celine Dion; 37 Tellurium; 38 The Punjab; 39 Swindon Town; 40 Vancouver; 41 Jelly beans; 42 Dora the Explorer; 43 William Hogarth; 44 Rupert...
...Shine; 15. Self contained underwater breathing apparatus; 16. Captain Hook. Pirates in Peter Pan; 17. Four (Te-Tellurium, H-Hydrogen, Ra-Radium, N-Nitrogen); 18. 1. George C. Scott; 2. Shirley Bassey; 3. Mario Puzo; 4. George...
More newspaper Results: 1-6 >>

 

encyclopedia articles on: Tellurium  - 9 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-9 >>  
 
TELLURIUM teloor e m Lat.,=earth, semimetallic...Celsius; valence 2, +4, or +6. Tellurium is a lustrous, brittle, crystalline...brown form of the element is also known. Tellurium forms many compounds corresponding to...
PERIODIC TABLE OF THE ELEMENTS: TELLURIUM Periodic Table of the Elements: Tellurium Atomic Number: 52 Atomic Symbol: Te Tellurium Atomic Weight: 127.60 Electron Configuration: 2 8 18 18 6 ____________________ Copyright...
TE symbol for the element tellurium . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...the ore zirconia and of uranium in a precipitate of pitchblende. He also worked on other elements, including titanium and tellurium. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia...
...sulfur S 16 32.06 112.8 444.674 tantalum Ta 73 180.9479 2996. 5425. 100 technetium Tc 43 (98) 2200. 4877. tellurium Te 52 127.60 449.5 0.3 989.8 3.8 terbium Tb 65 158.9254 1356. 3123. thallium Tl 81 204.383 303.5 1457...
More encyclopedia Results: 1-9 >>

 About Questia   ::   Privacy   ::   Contact