Praseodymium is a
chemical element
A chemical element is a species of atoms that have a given number of protons in their nuclei, including the pure substance consisting only of that species. Unlike chemical compounds, chemical elements cannot be broken down into simpler sub ...
with the
symbol
A symbol is a mark, sign, or word that indicates, signifies, or is understood as representing an idea, object, or relationship. Symbols allow people to go beyond what is known or seen by creating linkages between otherwise very different conc ...
Pr and the
atomic number 59. It is the third member of the
lanthanide
The lanthanide () or lanthanoid () series of chemical elements comprises the 15 metallic chemical elements with atomic numbers 57–71, from lanthanum through lutetium. These elements, along with the chemically similar elements scandium and yttr ...
series and is considered to be one of the
rare-earth metals. It is a soft, silvery, malleable and ductile
metal
A metal (from Greek μέταλλον ''métallon'', "mine, quarry, metal") is a material that, when freshly prepared, polished, or fractured, shows a lustrous appearance, and conducts electricity and heat relatively well. Metals are typi ...
, valued for its magnetic, electrical, chemical, and optical properties. It is too reactive to be found in native form, and pure praseodymium metal slowly develops a green oxide coating when exposed to air.
Praseodymium always occurs naturally together with the other rare-earth metals. It is the sixth-most abundant rare-earth element and fourth-most abundant lanthanide, making up 9.1
parts per million of the Earth's crust, an abundance similar to that of
boron. In 1841, Swedish chemist
Carl Gustav Mosander extracted a rare-earth oxide residue he called
didymium from a residue he called "lanthana", in turn separated from
cerium salts. In 1885, the Austrian chemist
Baron Carl Auer von Welsbach separated didymium into two elements that gave salts of different colours, which he named praseodymium and
neodymium. The name praseodymium comes from the Ancient Greek (), meaning '
leek
The leek is a vegetable, a cultivar of ''Allium ampeloprasum'', the broadleaf wild leek ( syn. ''Allium porrum''). The edible part of the plant is a bundle of leaf sheaths that is sometimes erroneously called a stem or stalk. The genus ''Alli ...
-green', and () 'twin'.
Like most
rare-earth elements, praseodymium most readily forms the +3
oxidation state, which is the only stable state in
aqueous solution, although the +4 oxidation state is known in some solid compounds and, uniquely among the lanthanides, the +5 oxidation state is attainable in
matrix-isolation conditions. The 0, +1, and +2 oxidation states are rarely found. Aqueous praseodymium ions are yellowish-green, and similarly, praseodymium results in various shades of yellow-green when incorporated into glasses. Many of praseodymium's industrial uses involve its ability to filter yellow light from light sources.
Properties
Physical properties
Praseodymium is the third member of the
lanthanide
The lanthanide () or lanthanoid () series of chemical elements comprises the 15 metallic chemical elements with atomic numbers 57–71, from lanthanum through lutetium. These elements, along with the chemically similar elements scandium and yttr ...
series, and a member of the
rare-earth metals. In the
periodic table
The periodic table, also known as the periodic table of the (chemical) elements, is a rows and columns arrangement of the chemical elements. It is widely used in chemistry, physics, and other sciences, and is generally seen as an icon of ch ...
, it appears between the lanthanides
cerium to its left and
neodymium to its right, and above the
actinide protactinium. It is a
ductile metal with a hardness comparable to that of
silver.
Its 59 electrons are arranged in the
configuration ef
36s
2; theoretically, all five outer electrons can act as
valence electrons, but the use of all five requires extreme conditions and normally, praseodymium only gives up three or sometimes four electrons in its compounds.
[Greenwood and Earnshaw, pp. 1232–5]
Like most other metals in the lanthanide series, praseodymium usually only uses three electrons as valence electrons, as afterward the remaining 4f electrons are too strongly bound: this is because the 4f orbitals penetrate the most through the inert xenon core of electrons to the nucleus, followed by 5d and 6s, and this increases with higher ionic charge. Praseodymium nevertheless can continue losing a fourth and even occasionally a fifth valence electron because it comes very early in the lanthanide series, where the nuclear charge is still low enough and the 4f subshell energy high enough to allow the removal of further valence electrons.
[Greenwood and Earnshaw, pp. 1235–8] Thus, similarly to the other early trivalent lanthanides, praseodymium has a
double hexagonal close-packed crystal structure at room temperature. At about 560 °C, it transitions to a
face-centered cubic structure, and a
body-centered cubic structure appears shortly before the melting point of 935 °C.
Praseodymium, like all of the lanthanides (except
lanthanum,
ytterbium, and
lutetium, which have no unpaired 4f electrons), is
paramagnetic at room temperature. Unlike some other rare-earth metals, which show
antiferromagnetic or
ferromagnetic
Ferromagnetism is a property of certain materials (such as iron) which results in a large observed magnetic permeability, and in many cases a large magnetic coercivity allowing the material to form a permanent magnet. Ferromagnetic materials ...
ordering at low temperatures, praseodymium is paramagnetic at all temperatures above 1 K.
Isotopes
Praseodymium has only one stable and naturally occurring isotope,
141Pr. It is thus a
mononuclidic and
monoisotopic element, and its
standard atomic weight
The standard atomic weight of a chemical element (symbol ''A''r°(E) for element "E") is the weighted arithmetic mean of the relative isotopic masses of all isotopes of that element weighted by each isotope's abundance on Earth. For example, is ...
can be determined with high precision as it is a constant of nature. This isotope has 82 neutrons, which is a
magic number that confers additional stability.
This isotope is produced in stars through the
s- and
r-process
In nuclear astrophysics, the rapid neutron-capture process, also known as the ''r''-process, is a set of nuclear reactions that is responsible for the creation of approximately half of the atomic nuclei heavier than iron, the "heavy elements", ...
es (slow and rapid neutron capture, respectively).
38 other radioisotopes have been synthesized. All of these isotopes have half-lives under a day (and most under a minute), with the single exception of
143Pr with a half-life of 13.6 days. Both
143Pr and
141Pr occur as
fission product
Nuclear fission products are the atomic fragments left after a large atomic nucleus undergoes nuclear fission. Typically, a large nucleus like that of uranium fissions by splitting into two smaller nuclei, along with a few neutrons, the release ...
s of
uranium. The primary decay mode of isotopes lighter than
141Pr is
positron emission or
electron capture to
isotopes of cerium, while that of heavier isotopes is
beta decay to
isotopes of neodymium.
Chemical properties

Praseodymium metal tarnishes slowly in air, forming a
spalling
Spall are fragments of a material that are broken off a larger solid body. It can be produced by a variety of mechanisms, including as a result of projectile impact, corrosion, weathering, cavitation, or excessive rolling pressure (as in a ball ...
green oxide layer like
iron
Iron () is a chemical element with symbol Fe (from la, ferrum) and atomic number 26. It is a metal that belongs to the first transition series and group 8 of the periodic table. It is, by mass, the most common element on Earth, right in ...
rust; a centimetre-sized sample of praseodymium metal corrodes completely in about a year. It burns readily at 150 °C to form
praseodymium(III,IV) oxide
Praseodymium(III,IV) oxide is the inorganic compound with the formula that is insoluble in water. It has a cubic fluorite structure. It is the most stable form of praseodymium oxide at ambient temperature and pressure.
Properties and structure ...
, a
nonstoichiometric compound
In chemistry, non-stoichiometric compounds are chemical compounds, almost always solid inorganic compounds, having elemental composition whose proportions cannot be represented by a ratio of small natural numbers (i.e. an empirical formula); mos ...
approximating to Pr
6O
11:
:12 Pr + 11 O
2 → 2 Pr
6O
11
This may be reduced to
praseodymium(III) oxide
Praseodymium(III) oxide, praseodymium oxide or praseodymia is the chemical compound composed of praseodymium and oxygen with the formula Pr2O3. It forms light green hexagonal crystals. Praseodymium(III) oxide crystallizes in the manganese(III) oxi ...
(Pr
2O
3) with hydrogen gas.
[Greenwood and Earnshaw, pp. 1238–9] Praseodymium(IV) oxide
Praseodymium(IV) oxide is an inorganic compound with chemical formula PrO2.
Production
Praseodymium(IV) oxide can be produced by boiling Pr6O11 in water or acetic acid
Acetic acid , systematically named ethanoic acid , is an acidic, col ...
, PrO
2, is the most oxidised product of the combustion of praseodymium and can be obtained by either reaction of praseodymium metal with pure oxygen at 400 °C and 282 bar
or by disproportionation of Pr
6O
11 in boiling acetic acid. The reactivity of praseodymium conforms to
periodic trends, as it is one of the first and thus one of the largest lanthanides.
At 1000 °C, many praseodymium oxides with composition PrO
2−''x'' exist as disordered, nonstoichiometric phases with 0 < ''x'' < 0.25, but at 400–700 °C the oxide defects are instead ordered, creating phases of the general formula Pr
''n''O
2''n''−2 with ''n'' = 4, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, and ∞. These phases PrO
''y'' are sometimes labelled α and β′ (nonstoichiometric), β (''y'' = 1.833), δ (1.818), ε (1.8), ζ (1.778), ι (1.714), θ, and σ.
[Greenwood and Earnshaw, pp. 643–4]
Praseodymium is an electropositive element and reacts slowly with cold water and quite quickly with hot water to form praseodymium(III) hydroxide:
:2 Pr (s) + 6 H
2O (l) → 2 Pr(OH)
3 (aq) + 3 H
2 (g)
Praseodymium metal reacts with all the stable
halogen
The halogens () are a group in the periodic table consisting of five or six chemically related elements: fluorine (F), chlorine (Cl), bromine (Br), iodine (I), astatine (At), and tennessine (Ts). In the modern IUPAC nomenclature, this group is ...
s to form trihalides:
:2 Pr (s) + 3 F
2 (g) → 2 PrF
3 (s)
reen:2 Pr (s) + 3 Cl
2 (g) → 2 PrCl
3 (s)
reen:2 Pr (s) + 3 Br
2 (g) → 2 PrBr
3 (s)
reen:2 Pr (s) + 3 I
2 (g) → 2 PrI
3 (s)
The
tetrafluoride, PrF4, is also known, and is produced by reacting a mixture of
sodium fluoride and
praseodymium(III) fluoride
Praseodymium(III) fluoride is an inorganic compound with the formula PrF3, being the most stable fluoride of praseodymium.
Production
The reaction between praseodymium(III) nitrate and sodium fluoride will produce praseodymium(III) fluoride as a ...
with fluorine gas, producing Na
2PrF
6, following which sodium fluoride is removed from the reaction mixture with liquid
hydrogen fluoride
Hydrogen fluoride (fluorane) is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula . This colorless gas or liquid is the principal industrial source of fluorine, often as an aqueous solution called hydrofluoric acid. It is an important feedstock in ...
.
[Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1240–2] Additionally, praseodymium forms a bronze
diiodide; like the diiodides of lanthanum, cerium, and
gadolinium, it is a praseodymium(III)
electride compound.
Praseodymium dissolves readily in dilute
sulfuric acid
Sulfuric acid (American spelling and the preferred IUPAC name) or sulphuric acid ( Commonwealth spelling), known in antiquity as oil of vitriol, is a mineral acid composed of the elements sulfur, oxygen and hydrogen, with the molecular formu ...
to form solutions containing the
chartreuse Pr
3+ ions, which exist as
2O)9">r(H2O)9sup>3+ complexes:
[Greenwood and Earnshaw, pp. 1242–4]
:2 Pr (s) + 3 H
2SO
4 (aq) → 2 Pr
3+ (aq) + 3 (aq) + 3 H
2 (g)
Dissolving praseodymium(IV) compounds in water does not result in solutions containing the yellow Pr
4+ ions;
because of the high positive
standard reduction potential
Redox potential (also known as oxidation / reduction potential, ''ORP'', ''pe'', ''E_'', or E_) is a measure of the tendency of a chemical species to acquire electrons from or lose electrons to an electrode and thereby be reduced or oxidised respe ...
of the Pr
4+/Pr
3+ couple at +3.2 V, these ions are unstable in aqueous solution, oxidising water and being reduced to Pr
3+. The value for the Pr
3+/Pr couple is −2.35 V.
However, in highly basic aqueous media, Pr
4+ ions can be generated by oxidation with
ozone.
Although praseodymium(V) in the bulk state is unknown, the existence of praseodymium in its +5 oxidation state (with the stable electron configuration of the preceding noble gas
xenon) under noble-gas matrix isolation conditions was reported in 2016. The species assigned to the +5 state were identified as
2">rO2sup>+, its O
2 and Ar adducts, and PrO
2(η
2-O
2).
Organopraseodymium compounds
Organopraseodymium compounds are very similar to
those of the other lanthanides, as they all share an inability to undergo
π backbonding. They are thus mostly restricted to the mostly ionic
cyclopentadienides (isostructural with those of lanthanum) and the σ-bonded simple alkyls and aryls, some of which may be polymeric.
[Greenwood and Earnshaw, pp. 1248–9] The coordination chemistry of praseodymium is largely that of the large, electropositive Pr
3+ ion, and is thus largely similar to those of the other early lanthanides La
3+, Ce
3+, and Nd
3+. For instance, like lanthanum, cerium, and neodymium, praseodymium nitrates form both 4:3 and 1:1 complexes with
18-crown-6, whereas the middle lanthanides from
promethium
Promethium is a chemical element with the symbol Pm and atomic number 61. All of its isotopes are radioactive; it is extremely rare, with only about 500–600 grams naturally occurring in Earth's crust at any given time. Promethium is one of onl ...
to
gadolinium can only form the 4:3 complex and the later lanthanides from
terbium to
lutetium cannot successfully coordinate to all the ligands. Such praseodymium complexes have high but uncertain coordination numbers and poorly defined stereochemistry, with exceptions resulting from exceptionally bulky ligands such as the tricoordinate
3">r3 There are also a few mixed oxides and fluorides involving praseodymium(IV), but it does not have an appreciable coordination chemistry in this oxidation state like its neighbour cerium.
[Greenwood and Earnshaw, pp. 1244–8] However, the first example of a molecular complex of praseodymium(IV) has recently been reported.
History

In 1751, the Swedish mineralogist
Axel Fredrik Cronstedt discovered a heavy mineral from the mine at
Bastnäs, later named
cerite. Thirty years later, the fifteen-year-old
Wilhelm Hisinger, from the family owning the mine, sent a sample of it to
Carl Scheele, who did not find any new elements within. In 1803, after Hisinger had become an ironmaster, he returned to the mineral with
Jöns Jacob Berzelius
Baron Jöns Jacob Berzelius (; by himself and his contemporaries named only Jacob Berzelius, 20 August 1779 – 7 August 1848) was a Swedish chemist. Berzelius is considered, along with Robert Boyle, John Dalton, and Antoine Lavoisier, to be on ...
and isolated a new oxide, which they named ''ceria'' after the
dwarf planet Ceres, which had been discovered two years earlier.
[Emsley, pp. 120–5] Ceria was simultaneously and independently isolated in Germany by
Martin Heinrich Klaproth.
[Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1424] Between 1839 and 1843, ceria was shown to be a mixture of oxides by the Swedish surgeon and chemist
Carl Gustaf Mosander, who lived in the same house as Berzelius; he separated out two other oxides, which he named ''lanthana'' and ''didymia''.
He partially decomposed a sample of
cerium nitrate by roasting it in air and then treating the resulting oxide with dilute
nitric acid. The metals that formed these oxides were thus named ''lanthanum'' and ''
didymium''.
While lanthanum turned out to be a pure element, didymium was not and turned out to be only a mixture of all the stable early lanthanides from praseodymium to
europium
Europium is a chemical element with the symbol Eu and atomic number 63. Europium is the most reactive lanthanide by far, having to be stored under an inert fluid to protect it from atmospheric oxygen or moisture. Europium is also the softest lanth ...
, as had been suspected by
Marc Delafontaine after spectroscopic analysis, though he lacked the time to pursue its separation into its constituents. The heavy pair of
samarium and europium were only removed in 1879 by
Paul-Émile Lecoq de Boisbaudran and it was not until 1885 that
Carl Auer von Welsbach separated didymium into praseodymium and neodymium.
Von Welsbach confirmed the separation by
spectroscopic analysis, but the products were of relatively low purity. Since neodymium was a larger constituent of didymium than praseodymium, it kept the old name with disambiguation, while praseodymium was distinguished by the leek-green colour of its salts (Greek πρασιος, "leek green").
The composite nature of didymium had previously been suggested in 1882 by
Bohuslav Brauner, who did not experimentally pursue its separation.
Occurrence and production
Praseodymium is not particularly rare, despite it being in the rare-earth metals, making up 9.2 mg/kg of the Earth's crust. This value is between those of
thorium (9.6 mg/kg) and
samarium (7.05 mg/kg), and makes praseodymium the fourth-most abundant of the lanthanides, behind cerium (66.5 mg/kg), neodymium (41.5 mg/kg), and lanthanum (39 mg/kg); it is less abundant than the
rare-earth elements
yttrium (33 mg/kg) and
scandium (22 mg/kg).
[Greenwood and Earnshaw, p. 1229–32] Instead, praseodymium's classification as a rare-earth metal comes from its rarity relative to "common earths" such as lime and magnesia, the few known minerals containing it for which extraction is commercially viable, as well as the length and complexity of extraction.
Although not particularly rare, praseodymium is never found as a dominant rare earth in praseodymium-bearing minerals. It is always preceded by cerium and lanthanum and usually also by neodymium.

The Pr
3+ ion is similar in size to the early lanthanides of the cerium group (those from lanthanum up to
samarium and
europium
Europium is a chemical element with the symbol Eu and atomic number 63. Europium is the most reactive lanthanide by far, having to be stored under an inert fluid to protect it from atmospheric oxygen or moisture. Europium is also the softest lanth ...
) that immediately follow in the periodic table, and hence it tends to occur along with them in
phosphate,
silicate
In chemistry, a silicate is any member of a family of polyatomic anions consisting of silicon and oxygen, usually with the general formula , where . The family includes orthosilicate (), metasilicate (), and pyrosilicate (, ). The name is al ...
and
carbonate minerals, such as
monazite (M
IIIPO
4) and
bastnäsite (M
IIICO
3F), where M refers to all the rare-earth metals except scandium and the radioactive
promethium
Promethium is a chemical element with the symbol Pm and atomic number 61. All of its isotopes are radioactive; it is extremely rare, with only about 500–600 grams naturally occurring in Earth's crust at any given time. Promethium is one of onl ...
(mostly Ce, La, and Y, with somewhat less Nd and Pr).
Bastnäsite is usually lacking in
thorium and the heavy lanthanides, and the purification of the light lanthanides from it is less involved. The ore, after being crushed and ground, is first treated with hot concentrated sulfuric acid, evolving carbon dioxide,
hydrogen fluoride
Hydrogen fluoride (fluorane) is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula . This colorless gas or liquid is the principal industrial source of fluorine, often as an aqueous solution called hydrofluoric acid. It is an important feedstock in ...
, and
silicon tetrafluoride. The product is then dried and leached with water, leaving the early lanthanide ions, including lanthanum, in solution.
The procedure for monazite, which usually contains all the rare earth, as well as thorium, is more involved. Monazite, because of its magnetic properties, can be separated by repeated electromagnetic separation. After separation, it is treated with hot concentrated sulfuric acid to produce water-soluble sulfates of rare earth. The acidic filtrates are partially neutralized with
sodium hydroxide
Sodium hydroxide, also known as lye and caustic soda, is an inorganic compound with the formula NaOH. It is a white solid ionic compound consisting of sodium cations and hydroxide anions .
Sodium hydroxide is a highly caustic base and alkali ...
to pH 3–4, during which thorium precipitates as hydroxide and is removed. The solution is treated with
ammonium oxalate to convert rare earth to their insoluble
oxalates, the oxalates are converted to oxides by annealing, and the oxides are dissolved in nitric acid. This last step excludes one of the main components,
cerium, whose oxide is insoluble in HNO
3.
[.] Care must be taken when handling some of the residues as they contain
228Ra, the daughter of
232Th, which is a strong gamma emitter.
Praseodymium may then be separated from the other lanthanides via ion-exchange chromatography, or by using a solvent such as
tributyl phosphate where the solubility of Ln
3+ increases as the atomic number increases. If ion-exchange chromatography is used, the mixture of lanthanides is loaded into one column of cation-exchange resin and Cu
2+ or Zn
2+ or Fe
3+ is loaded into the other. An aqueous solution of a complexing agent, known as the eluant (usually triammonium edtate), is passed through the columns, and Ln
3+ is displaced from the first column and redeposited in a compact band at the top of the column before being re-displaced by . The
Gibbs free energy of formation for Ln(edta·H) complexes increases along with the lanthanides by about one quarter from Ce
3+ to Lu
3+, so that the Ln
3+ cations descend the development column in a band and are fractionated repeatedly, eluting from heaviest to lightest. They are then precipitated as their insoluble oxalates, burned to form the oxides, and then reduced to metals.
Applications
Leo Moser (son of Ludwig Moser, founder of the
Moser Glassworks in what is now
Karlovy Vary
Karlovy Vary (; german: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled ''Carlsbad'' in English) is a spa town, spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 46,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá. ...
in the Czech Republic, not to be confused with
the mathematician of the same name) investigated the use of praseodymium in glass coloration in the late 1920s, yielding a yellow-green glass given the name "Prasemit". However, at that time far cheaper colorants could give a similar color, so Prasemit was not popular, few pieces were made, and examples are now extremely rare. Moser also blended praseodymium with neodymium to produce "Heliolite" glass ("Heliolit" in
German), which was more widely accepted. The first enduring commercial use of purified praseodymium, which continues today, is in the form of a yellow-orange "Praseodymium Yellow" stain for ceramics, which is a solid solution in the
zircon lattice. This stain has no hint of green in it; by contrast, at sufficiently high loadings, praseodymium glass is distinctly green rather than pure yellow.
Like many other lanthanides, praseodymium's shielded
f-orbital
In atomic theory and quantum mechanics, an atomic orbital is a function describing the location and wave-like behavior of an electron in an atom. This function can be used to calculate the probability of finding any electron of an atom in any spe ...
s allow for long
excited state
In quantum mechanics, an excited state of a system (such as an atom, molecule or nucleus) is any quantum state of the system that has a higher energy than the ground state (that is, more energy than the absolute minimum). Excitation refers to a ...
lifetimes and high
luminescence yields. Pr
3+ as a
dopant ion therefore sees many applications in
optics and
photonics. These include
DPSS-lasers, single-mode fiber
optical amplifier
An optical amplifier is a device that amplifies an optical signal directly, without the need to first convert it to an electrical signal. An optical amplifier may be thought of as a laser without an optical cavity, or one in which feedback fr ...
s, fiber lasers,
upconverting nanoparticles as well as activators in red, green, blue, and ultraviolet phosphors.
Silicate crystals doped with praseodymium ions have also been used to
slow a light pulse down to a few hundred meters per second.
As the lanthanides are so similar, praseodymium can substitute for most other lanthanides without significant loss of function, and indeed many applications such as
mischmetal and
ferrocerium alloys involve variable mixes of several lanthanides, including small quantities of praseodymium. The following more modern applications involve praseodymium specifically or at least praseodymium in a small subset of the lanthanides:
* In combination with neodymium, another rare-earth element, praseodymium is used to create high-power magnets notable for their strength and durability.
[Rare Earth Elements 101](_blank)
, IAMGOLD Corporation, April 2012, pp. 5, 7. In general, most alloys of the cerium-group rare earths (
lanthanum through
samarium) with 3d
transition metals give extremely stable magnets that are often used in small equipment, such as motors, printers, watches, headphones, loudspeakers, and magnetic storage.
*Praseodymium–
nickel intermetallic (PrNi
5) has such a strong
magnetocaloric effect that it has allowed scientists to approach within one thousandth of a degree of
absolute zero.
* As an
alloy
An alloy is a mixture of chemical elements of which at least one is a metal. Unlike chemical compounds with metallic bases, an alloy will retain all the properties of a metal in the resulting material, such as electrical conductivity, ductilit ...
ing agent with
magnesium to create high-strength metals that are used in
aircraft engines;
yttrium and
neodymium are also viable substitutes.
* Praseodymium is present in the rare-earth mixture whose fluoride forms the core of
carbon arc lights, which are used in the
motion picture industry for
studio
A studio is an artist or worker's workroom. This can be for the purpose of acting, architecture, painting, pottery (ceramics), sculpture, origami, woodworking, scrapbooking, photography, graphic design, filmmaking, animation, industrial design ...
lighting and
projector lights.
[Emsley, pp. 423–5]
* Praseodymium
compounds give
glass
Glass is a non-Crystallinity, crystalline, often transparency and translucency, transparent, amorphous solid that has widespread practical, technological, and decorative use in, for example, window panes, tableware, and optics. Glass is most ...
es,
enamels and ceramics a
yellow color.
* Praseodymium is a component of
didymium glass, which is used to make certain types of
welder
In a broad sense, a welder is anyone, amateur or professional, who uses welding equipment, perhaps especially one who uses such equipment fairly often. In a narrower sense, a welder is a tradesperson who specializes in fusing materials together ...
's and
glass blower's
goggles.
* Praseodymium oxide in solid solution with
ceria or
ceria-zirconia has been used as an
oxidation catalyst.
Due to its role in permanent magnets used for wind turbines, it has been argued that praseodymium will be one of the main objects of geopolitical competition in a world running on renewable energy. However, this perspective has been criticized for failing to recognize that most wind turbines do not use permanent magnets and for underestimating the power of economic incentives for expanded production.
Biological role and precautions
The early lanthanides have been found to be essential to some
methanotrophic bacteria living in
volcanic mudpots, such as ''
Methylacidiphilum fumariolicum
''Methylacidiphilum fumariolicum '' is an autotrophic bacterium first described in 2007 growing on volcanic pools near Naples, Italy. It grows in mud at temperatures between 50 °C and 60 °C and an acidic pH of 2–5. It is able to oxi ...
'': lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, and neodymium are about equally effective.
Praseodymium is otherwise not known to have a biological role in any other organisms, but it is not very toxic either. Intravenous injection of rare earths into animals has been known to impair liver function, but the main side effects from inhalation of rare-earth oxides in humans come from radioactive
thorium and
uranium impurities.
References
Bibliography
*
*
Further reading
* R. J. Callow, ''The Industrial Chemistry of the Lanthanons, Yttrium, Thorium, and Uranium'', Pergamon Press, 1967.
* Bouhani, H (2020). "Engineering the magnetocaloric properties of PrVO3 epitaxial oxide thin films by strain effects". Applied Physics Letters. 117 (7). arXiv:2008.09193. doi:10.1063/5.0021031.
External links
WebElements.com—Praseodymium
{{Authority control
Chemical elements
Chemical elements with double hexagonal close-packed structure
Lanthanides
Reducing agents