Notable characteristics
Vanadium is a soft and ductile, silver-grey metal. It has good resistance to
corrosion by
alkalis,
sulfuric and
hydrochloric acid. It
oxidizes readily at about 933
K (660 C). Vanadium has good structural strength and a low fission neutron cross section, making it useful in nuclear applications. Although a metal, it shares with
chromium and
manganese the property of having valency oxides with
acid properties.
Common
oxidation states of vanadium include +2, +3, +4 and +5. A popular experiment with ammonium vanadate NH
4VO
3, reducing the compound with
zinc metal, can demonstrate colorimetrically all four of these vanadium oxidation states. A +1 oxidation state is rarely seen.
Applications
Approximately 80% of vanadium produced is used as
ferrovanadium or as a
steel additive. Other uses:
In such alloys as
specialty stainless steel, e.g. for use in surgical instruments and tools.
rust resistant and high speed tool steels.
mixed with aluminium in titanium alloys used in jet engines and high-speed airframes
Vanadium steel alloys are used in axles, crankshafts, gears, and other critical components.
It is an important carbide stabilizer in making steels.
Because of its low fission neutron cross section, vanadium has nuclear applications.
Vanadium foil is used in cladding titanium to steel.
Vanadium-gallium tape is used in superconducting magnets (175,000 gauss).
Vanadium pentoxide V2O5 is used as a catalyst in manufacturing sulfuric acid (via the contact process) and maleic anhydride. It is also used in making ceramics.
Glass coated with vanadium dioxide VO2 can block infrared radiation (and not visible light) at a specific temperature.
Electrical fuel cells and storage batteries such as vanadium redox batteries.
Added to corundum to make simulated alexandrite jewelry.
Vanadate electrochemical conversion coatings for protecting steel against rust and corrosion
Used to make lacrosse shafts
History
Vanadium was originally
discovered by
Andrés Manuel del Río (a Spanish-born Mexican mineralogist) in
Mexico City, in
1801. He called it "brown lead" (now named
vanadinite). Through experimentation, its colors reminded him of
chromium, so he named the element panchromium. He later renamed this compound erythronium, since most of the salts turned red when heated. The French chemist
Hippolyte Victor Collet-Descotils incorrectly declared that del Río's new element was only impure
chromium. Del Río thought himself to be mistaken and accepted the statement of the French chemist that was also backed by del Río's friend Baron
Alexander von Humboldt.
In
1831,
Sefström of
Sweden rediscovered vanadium in a new oxide he found while working with some
iron ores and later that same year
Friedrich Wöhler confirmed del Río's earlier work. Later,
George William Featherstonhaugh, one of the first US geologists, suggested that the element should be named "rionium" after del Río, but this never happened.
Metallic vanadium was isolated by
Henry Enfield Roscoe in
1867, who reduced
vanadium(III) chloride VCl
3 with
hydrogen. The name vanadium comes from
Vanadis, a goddess in
Scandinavian mythology, because the element has beautiful multicolored
chemical compounds.
Biological role
In
biology, a vanadium atom is an essential component of some
enzymes, particularly the vanadium
nitrogenase used by some
nitrogen-fixing micro-organisms. Vanadium is essential to
ascidians or
sea squirts in
vanadium chromagen proteins. The concentration of vanadium in their blood is more than 100 times higher than the concentration of vanadium in the seawater around them.
Rats and
chickens are also known to require vanadium in very small amounts and deficiencies result in reduced growth and impaired
reproduction.
A form of
vanadium, vanadyl sulfate, seems to improve glucose control in people with type 2 diabetes.
Mineral supplement in drinking water
Most continental waters show a vanadium concentration of less than 3 ppb. However, the groundwater of
Mt. Fuji contains a very high concentration of vanadium—up to 150 ppb. This vanadium is solubilized from the basalt by the groundwater. The vanadium content in Mt. Fuji becomes higher at places nearer the summit and deeper in the ground. Recently this high-vanadium water of Mt. Fuji has been sold by many companies as an agent to cope with diabetes. However, there is no concrete evidence for its efficacy. The rainbow trout living in the Mt. Fuji water showed much higher accumulation of vanadium in kidneys and bone.
Occurrence
Vanadium is never found unbound in nature but it does occur in about 65 different
minerals among which are
patronite VS
4,
vanadinite Pb
5(VO
4)
3Cl, and
carnotite K
2(UO
2)
2(VO
4)
2.3H
2O. Vanadium is also present in
bauxite, and in
carbon containing deposits such as
crude oil,
coal,
oil shale and
tar sands. Vanadium has also been detected spectroscopically in light from the
Sun and some other
stars.
Much of the vanadium metal being produced is now made by
calcium reduction of
V2O5 in a pressure vessel. Vanadium is usually recovered as a by-product or co-product, and so world resources of the element are not really indicative of available supply.
:''See also
:category:vanadate minerals.''
Isolation
Vanadium is available commercially and production of a sample in the
laboratory is not normally required. Commercially, routes leading to metallic vanadium as main product are not usually required as enough is produced as
byproduct in other processes.
In industry, heating of vanadium ore or residues from other processes with
salt NaCl or
sodium carbonate Na
2CO
3 at about 850°C gives
sodium vanadate NaVO
3. This is dissolved in water and acidified to give a red solid which in turn is melted to form a crude form of
vanadium pentoxide V
2O
5. Reduction of vanadium pentoxide with
calcium gives pure vanadium. An alternative suitable for small scales is the reduction of vanadium pentachloride VCl
5 with
hydrogen or
magnesium. Many other methods are also in use.
Industrially, most vanadium is used as an additive to improve
steels. Rather than proceed via pure vanadium metal it is often sufficient to react the crude of vanadium pentoxide V
2O
5 with crude
iron. This produces ferrovanadium suitable for further work.
Compounds
Vanadium pentoxide V
2O
5 is used as a catalyst principally in the production of sulfuric acid. It is the source of vanadium used in the manufacture of ferrovanadium. It can be used as a dye and color-fixer.
Vanadyl sulfate VOSO
4, also called
vanadium(IV) sulfate oxide hydrate, is used as a relatively controversial
dietary supplement, primarily for increasing
insulin sensitivity and
body-building. Whether it works for the latter purpose has not been proven, and there is some evidence that athletes who take it are merely experiencing a
placebo effect.
Vanadium(IV) chloride VCl
4 is a soluble form of vanadium that is commonly used in the laboratory. V(IV) is the reduced form of V(V), and commonly occurs after
anaerobic respiration by dissimilatory metal reducing
bacteria. VCl
4 reacts violently with water.
Toxicity of vanadium compounds
The toxicity of vanadium depends on its physico-chemical state; particularly on its valence state and solubility. Tetravalent VOSO4 has been reported to be more than 5 times as toxic as trivalent V2O3 (Roschin, 1967). Vanadium compounds are poorly absorbed through the gastrointestinal system. Inhalation exposures to vanadium and vanadium compounds result primarily in adverse effects to the respiratory system (Sax, 1984; ATSDR, 1990; Ress et al., 2003; Worle-Knirsch et al., 2007). Quantitative data are, however, insufficient to derive a subchronic or chronic inhalation reference dose. Other effects have been reported on blood parameters after oral or inhalation exposures (Scibior et al., 2006; Gonzalez-Villalva et al., 2006), on liver (Kobayashi et al., 2006), neurological development in rats (Soaso and Garcia, 2007), and other organs.
There is little evidence that vanadium or vanadium compounds are reproductive toxins or teratogens. Vanadium pentoxide was reported to be carcinogenic in male rats and male and female mice by inhalation in an NTP study (Ress et al., 2003), although the interpretation of the results has recently been disputed (Duffus, 2007). Vanadium has not been classified as to carcinogenicity by the U.S. EPA (1991a).
Various oxidation states of vanadium ions
It is known that vanadium gets the oxidation states +2, +3, +4, +5.
To observe the colours of these states,
ammonium metavanadate (NH
4VO
3) can be used as a starting agent.
It must be acidified beforehand so dioxovanadium(V) ion, VO
2+ (yellow +5 oxidation number) is produced. In alkaline medium, the stable form of vanadium(V) state is VO
3-.
Adding
zinc powder and concentrated
hydrochloric acid continuously, VO
2+ is reduced into blue VO
2+.
It can be seen that during the reaction, the mixture is green in colour as the original yellow of the +5 state and the blue of the +4 are present.
Continuously adding Zn powder and concentrated HCl, blue VO
2+ is reduced to green V
3+. V
3+ is then reduced to violet V
2+ by Zn powder and concentrated HCl again.
:''See also
Vanadium compounds.''
:''See also
Vanadium(V) oxide.''
Isotopes
Naturally occurring vanadium is composed of one stable
isotope 51V and one radioactive isotope
50V with a
half-life of 1.5×10
17 years. 24 artificial
radioisotopes have been characterized (in the range of
mass number between 40 and 65) with the most stable being
49V with a half-life of 330 days, and
48V with a half-life of 15.9735 days. All of the remaining
radioactive isotopes have half-lives shorter than an hour, the majority of them below 10 seconds. In 4 isotopes,
metastable excited states were found (including 2 metastable states for
60V).
The primary
decay mode before the most abundant stable isotope
51V is
electron capture. The next most common mode is
beta decay. The primary
decay products before
51V are element 22 (
titanium) isotopes and the primary products after are element 24 (
chromium) isotopes.
Precautions
Powdered metallic vanadium is a fire hazard, and unless known otherwise, all vanadium compounds should be considered highly toxic. Generally, the higher the oxidation state of vanadium, the more toxic the compound is. The most dangerous compound is
vanadium pentoxide.
The
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has set an exposure limit of 0.05 mg/m
3 for vanadium pentoxide dust and 0.1 mg/m
3 for vanadium pentoxide fumes in workplace air for an 8-hour workday, 40-hour work week.
The
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has recommended that 35 mg/m
3 of vanadium be considered immediately dangerous to life and health. This is the exposure level of a chemical that is likely to cause permanent health problems or death.
References
Los Alamos National Laboratory – Vanadium
''High vanadium content in Mt.Fuji groundwater and its relevance to the ancient biosphere by Tatsuo Hamada in Vanadium in Environment. Part 1: Chemistry and Biochemistry. Edited by Jerome O. Nriagu. Page 97-123. 1998. John Wilen & Sons, Inc.''
Duffus JH. Carcinogenicity classification of vanadium pentoxide and inorganic vanadium compounds, the NTP study of carcinogenicity of inhaled vanadium pentoxide, and vanadium chemistry. Regul Toxicol Pharmacol 2007 Feb;47(1):110-4.
Gonzalez-Villalva A, Fortoul TI, Avila-Costa MR, et al. Thrombocytosis induced in mice after subacute and subchronic V2O5 inhalation. Toxicol Ind Health 2006 Apr;22(3):113-6.
Kobayashi K, Himeno S, Satoh M, et al. Pentavalent vanadium induces hepatic metallothionein through interleukin-6-dependent and -independent mechanisms. Toxicology 2006 Dec 7;228(2-3:162-170.
Ress NB, Chou BJ, Renne RA, et al. Carcinogenicity of inhaled vanadium pentoxide in F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice. Toxicol Sci 2003 Aug;74(2):287-96.
Scibior A, Zaporowska H, Ostrowski J. Selected haematological and biochemical parameters of blood in rats after subchronic administration of vanadium and/or magnesium in drinking water. Arch Environ Contam Toxicol 2006 Aug;51(2):287-95.
Soazo M, Garcia GB. Vanadium exposure through lactation produces behavioral alterations and CNS myelin deficit in neonatal rats. Neurotoxicol Teratol 2007 Jul-Aug;29(4):503-10.
Worle-Knirsch JM, Kern K, Schleh C, et al. Nanoparticulate vanadium oxide potentiated vanadium toxicity in human lung cells. Environ Sci Technol 2007 Jan 1;41(1):331-6.