Group 10 | |
Group Number: | 10 |
By Element: | nickel group |
Cas: | part of VIIIB |
Old Iupac: | part of VIII |
Mark: | Ni,Pd,Pt,Ds |
Left: | group 9 |
Right: | group 11 |
|-! colspan=2 style="text-align:left;" | ↓ Period|-! 4| |-! 5| |-! 6| |-! 7| |-| colspan="2"|----Legend
primordial element | |
synthetic element | |
Atomic number color: | |
black=solid |
Group 10, numbered by current IUPAC style, is the group of chemical elements in the periodic table that consists of nickel (Ni), palladium (Pd), platinum (Pt), and darmstadtium (Ds). All are d-block transition metals. All known isotopes of darmstadtium are radioactive with short half-lives, and are not known to occur in nature; only minute quantities have been synthesized in laboratories.
No. of electrons per shell | Electronic configuration | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
28 | nickel | 2, 8, 16, 2 | ||
46 | palladium | 2, 8, 18, 18 | ||
78 | platinum | 2, 8, 18, 32, 17, 1 | ||
110 | darmstadtium | 2, 8, 18, 32, 32, 16, 2 (predicted) | (predicted) |
Group 10 elements are observed in oxidation states of +1 to +4.[1] The +2 oxidation state is common for nickel and palladium, while +2 and +4 are common for platinum. Oxidation states of -2 and -1 have also been observed for nickel[2] [3] and platinum,[4] and an oxidation state of +5 has been observed for palladium[5] and platinum.[6] Platinum has also been observed in oxidations states of -3[7] and +6.[8] Theory suggests that platinum may produce a +10 oxidation state under specific conditions, but this remains to be shown empirically.[9]
28 | nickel | white metal; cubic | ||||||||
46 | palladium | silver-white metal; cubic | ||||||||
78 | platinum | silver-gray metal; cubic |
Nickel occurs naturally in ores, and it is the earth's 22nd most abundant element. Two prominent groups of ores from which it can be extracted are laterites and sulfide ores.[12] Indonesia holds the world's largest nickel reserve, and is also its largest producer.[13]
The use of nickel, often mistaken for copper, dates as far back as 3500 BCE. Nickel has been discovered in a dagger dating to 3100 BCE, in Egyptian iron beads, a bronze reamer found in Syria dating to 3500–3100 BCE, as copper-nickel alloys in coins minted in Bactria, in weapons and pots near the Senegal river, and as agricultural tools used by Mexicans in the 1700s.[14] There is evidence to suggest that the use of nickel in antiquity came from meteoric iron, such as in the Sumerian name for iron an-bar ("fire from heaven") or in Hittite texts that describe iron's heavenly origins. Nickel was not formally named as an element until A. F. Cronstedt isolated the impure metal from "kupfernickel" (Old Nick's copper) in 1751.[10] In 1804, J. B. Richter determined the physical properties of nickel using a purer sample, describing the metal as ductile and strong with a high melting point. The strength of nickel-steel alloys were described in 1889 and since then, nickel steels saw extensive use first for military applications and then in the development of corrosion- and heat-resistant alloys during the 20th century.
Palladium was isolated by William Hyde Wollaston in 1803 while he was working on refining platinum metals. Palladium was in a residue left behind after platinum was precipitated out of a solution of hydrochloric acid and nitric acid as (NH4)PtCl6.[11] Wollaston named it after the recently discovered asteroid 2 Pallas and anonymously sold small samples of the metal to a shop, which advertised it as a "new noble metal" called "Palladium, or New Silver".[15] This raised doubts about its purity, source, and the identity of its discoverer, causing controversy. He eventually identified himself and read his paper on the discovery of palladium to the Royal Society in 1805.[16]
Prior to its formal discovery, platinum was used in jewelry by native Ecuadorians of the province of Esmeraldas.[17] The metal was found in small grains mixed with gold in river deposits, which the workers sintered with gold to form small trinkets such as rings. The first published report of platinum was written by Antonio de Ulloa, a Spanish mathematician, astronomer, and naval officer who observed "platina" (little silver) in the gold mines of Ecuador during a French expedition in 1736.[18] Miners found the "platina" difficult to separate from gold, leading to the abandonment of those mines. Charles Wood (ironmaster) brought samples of the metal to England in 1741 and investigated its properties, observing its high melting point and its presence as small white grains in black metallic sand. Interest in the metal grew after Wood's findings were reported to the Royal Society. Henrik Teofilus Scheffer, a Swedish scientist, referred to the precious metal as "white gold" and the "seventh metal" in 1751, reporting its high durability, high density, and that it melted easily when mixed with copper or arsenic. Both Pierre-François Chabaneau (during the 1780s) and William Hyde Wollaston (during the 1800s) developed a powder metallurgy technique to produce malleable platinum, but kept their process a secret. However, their platinum ingots were brittle and tended to crack easily, likely due to impurities. In the 1800s, furnaces capable of sustaining high temperatures were invented, which eventually replaced powder metallurgy and introduced melted platinum to the market.
The group 10 metals share several uses. These include:
Platinum complexes are commonly used in chemotherapy as anticancer drugs due to their antitumor activity. Palladium complexes also show marginal antitumor activity, yet its poor activity is labile compared to platinum complexes.[19]