Niobium | Properties, Uses, & History of the Chemical Element | Britannica
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
niobium (Nb), chemical element, refractory metal of Group 5 (Vb) of the periodic table, used in alloys, tools and dies, and superconductive magnets. Niobium is closely associated with tantalum in ores and in properties.
Due to the great chemical similarity of niobium and tantalum, the establishment of the individual identities of the two elements was very difficult. Niobium was first discovered (1801) in an ore sample from Connecticut by the English chemist Charles Hatchett, who called the element columbium in honour of the country of its origin, Columbia being a synonym for the United States. In 1844 a German chemist, Heinrich Rose, discovered what he considered to be a new element occurring along with tantalum and named it niobium after Niobe, the mythological goddess who was the daughter of Tantalus. After considerable controversy it was decided that columbium and niobium were the same element. Eventually international agreement (about 1950) was reached to adopt the name niobium, though columbium persisted in the U.S. metallurgical industry.
Niobium is roughly 10 times more abundant in the crust of the Earth than is tantalum. Niobium, more plentiful than lead and less abundant than copper in the Earth’s crust, occurs dispersed except for relatively few minerals. Of these minerals, the columbite–tantalite series, in which columbite (FeNb2O6) and tantalite (FeTa2O6) occur in highly variable ratios, is the main commercial source. Pyrochlore, a calcium sodium niobate, is also the principal commercial source. Natural niobium occurs entirely as the stable isotope niobium-93.
The production procedures for niobium are complex, the major problem being its separation from tantalum. Separation from tantalum, when necessary, is effected by solvent extraction in a liquid-liquid process; the niobium is then precipitated and roasted to niobium pentoxide, which is reduced to niobium powder through metallothermic and hydriding processes. The powder is consolidated and purified further by electron-beam melting. Vacuum sintering of powder is also used for consolidation. Niobium can also be obtained by either electrolysis of fused salts or reduction of fluoro complexes with a very reactive metal such as sodium. (For information on the mining, recovery, and applications of niobium, see niobium processing.)
The pure metal is soft and ductile; it looks like steel or, when polished, like platinum. Although it has excellent corrosion resistance, niobium is susceptible to oxidation above about 400° C (750° F). Niobium can best be dissolved in a mixture of nitric and hydrofluoric acids. Completely miscible with iron, it is added in the form of ferroniobium to some stainless steels to give stability on welding or heating. Niobium is used as a major alloying element in nickel-based superalloys and as a minor but important additive to high-strength, low-alloy steels. Because of its compatibility with uranium, resistance to corrosion by molten alkali-metal coolants, and low thermal-neutron cross section, it has been used alone or alloyed with zirconium in claddings for nuclear reactor cores. Cemented carbides used as hot-pressing dies and cutting tools are made harder and more resistant to shock and erosion by the presence of niobium. Niobium is useful in constructing cryogenic (low temperature) electronic devices of low power consumption. Niobium-tin (Nb3Sn) is a superconductor below 18.45 Kelvins (K), and niobium metal itself, below 9.15 K.
Compounds of niobium are of relatively minor importance. Those found in nature have the +5 oxidation state, but compounds of lower oxidation states (+2 to +4) have been prepared. Quadruply charged niobium, for example, in the form of the carbide, NbC, is used for making cemented carbides.
niobium (Nb)