Lutetium is a chemical element in the periodic table that has the symbol Lu and atomic number 71. A metallic element of the rare earth group, lutetium usually occurs in association with yttrium and is sometimes used in metal alloys and as a catalyst in various processes. A strict correlation between periodic table blocks and chemical series for neutral atoms would describe lutetium as a transition metal, but it is commonly considered a lanthanide.
This element is very expensive to obtain in useful quantities and therefore it has very few commercial uses. However, stable lutetium can be used as catalysts in petroleum cracking in refineries and can also be used in alkylation, hydrogenation, and polymerization applications.
Lutetium aluminum garnet (Al5Lu3O12) has been proposed for use as a lens material in high refractive index immersion lithography.
The separation of lutetium from Marignac's ytterbium was first described by Urbain and the naming honor therefore went to him. He chose the names neoytterbium (new ytterbium) and lutecium for the new element but neoytterbium was eventually reverted back to ytterbium and in 1949 the spelling of element 71 was changed to lutetium.
Welsbach proposed the names cassiopium for element 71 (after the constellation Cassiopeia) and albebaranium for the new name of ytterbium but these naming proposals where rejected (although many German scientists still call element 71 cassiopium).
The principal commercially viable ore of lutetium is the rare earth phosphate mineral monazite: (Ce, La, etc.)PO4 which contains 0.003% of the element. Pure lutetium metal has only relatively recently been isolated and is very difficult to prepare (thus it is one of the most rare and expensive of the rare earth metals). It is separated from other rare earth elements by ion exchange (reduction of anhydrous LuCl3 or LuF3 by either an alkali metal or alkaline earth metal).
The isotopes of lutetium range in atomic weight from 149.973 (Lu-150) to 183.961 (Lu-184). The primary decay mode before the most abundant stable isotope, Lu-175, is electron capture (with some alpha and positron emission), and the primary mode after is beta emission. The primary decay products before Lu-175 are element 70 (ytterbium) isotopes and the primary products after are element 72 (hafnium) isotopes.
See also Lutetium compounds.
Chemical elements | Lanthanides | Transition metals
Luteci | Lutecium | Lutetium | Luteetsium | Λουτήτιο | Lutecio | Lutecio | Lutétium | 루테튬 | Lutecij | Lutecio | Lútetín | Lutezio | לוטציום | Lûtesyûm | Lutēcijs | Lutecis | Lutécium | Lutetium | ルテチウム | Lutetium | Lutet | Lutécio | Лютеций | Лутецијум | Lutecijum | Lutetium | Lutetium | ลูทีเตียม | Лютецій | 镥
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Lutetium".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world