Hafnium - Hf

General Information

Discovery

Hafnium was discovered by D. Coster and G.C. von Hevesey in 1923 in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Appearance

Hafnium is a lustrous, silvery, ductile metal.

Source

Most zirconium minerals contain 1-5% hafnium, and the metal is prepared by reducing the tetrachloride with sodium or magnesium.

Uses

Hafnium has a good thermal absorption cross-section for neutrons, so is used in control rods in nuclear reactors. It has been successfully alloyed with several metals including iron, titanium and niobium. It is also used in gas-filled and incandescent lights.

Biological Role

Hafnium has no known biological role, and is non-toxic.

General Information

Hafnium resists corrosion due to an oxide film, but powdered hafnium will burn in air. It is unaffected by all acids except hydrogen fluoride, and also all alkalis. At high temperatures it reacts with oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, boron, sulfur and silicon.




  Physical Information    
  Atomic Number   72
  Relative Atomic Mass (12C=12.000)   178.49
  Melting Point/K   2503
  Boiling Point/K   5470
  Density/kg m-3   13310 (293K)
  Ground State Electron Configuration   [Xe]4f145d26s2
  Electron Affinity(M-M-)/kJ mol-1   +61


  Key Isotopes          
  nuclide 172Hf 174Hf 175Hf 176Hf 177Hf
  atomic mass   173.9   175.9 176.9
  natural abundance 0% 0.2% 0% 5.2% 18.6%
  half-life 5 yrs 2x1015 yrs 70 days stable stable
 
  nuclide 178Hf 179Hf 180Hf 181Hf 182Hf
  atomic mass 177.9 178.9 179.9    
  natural abundance 27.1% 13.7% 35.2% 0% 0%
  half-life stable stable stable 42.5 days 9x106 yrs


Other Information  
Enthalpy of Fusion/kJ mol-1 25.5
Enthalpy of Vaporisation/kJ mol-1 570.7
     
Oxidation States  
main Hf+4
others Hf+1, Hf+2, Hf+3
  Ionisation Energies/kJ mol-1
  M - M+ 642
  M+ - M2+ 1440
  M2+ - M3+ 2250
  M3+ - M4+ 3216
  M4+ - M5+  
  M5+ - M6+  
  M6+ - M7+  
  M7+ - M8+  
  M8+ - M9+  
  M9+ - M10+