Scandium is a
chemical element 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 ...
Sc and
atomic number 21. It is a silvery-white metallic
d-block element. Historically, it has been classified as a
rare-earth element, together with
yttrium and 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 ...
s. It was discovered in 1879 by spectral analysis of the
minerals
euxenite and
gadolinite
Gadolinite, sometimes known as ytterbite, is a silicate mineral consisting principally of the silicates of cerium, lanthanum, neodymium, yttrium, beryllium, and iron with the formula . It is called gadolinite-(Ce) or gadolinite-(Y), depending on ...
from
Scandinavia.
Scandium is present in most of the deposits of rare-earth and
uranium compounds, but it is extracted from these ores in only a few mines worldwide. Because of the low availability and difficulties in the preparation of metallic scandium, which was first done in 1937, applications for scandium were not developed until the 1970s, when the positive effects of scandium on
aluminium alloys were discovered, and its use in such alloys remains its only major application. The global trade of scandium oxide is 15–20
tonnes per year.
The properties of scandium compounds are intermediate between those of
aluminium and
yttrium. A
diagonal relationship exists between the behavior of
magnesium and scandium, just as there is between
beryllium and aluminium. In the chemical compounds of the elements in group 3, the predominant
oxidation state is +3.
Properties
Chemical characteristics
Scandium is a soft metal with a silvery appearance. It develops a slightly yellowish or pinkish cast when
oxidized by air. It is susceptible to weathering and dissolves slowly in most dilute
acids. It does not react with a 1:1 mixture of
nitric acid () and 48.0%
hydrofluoric acid
Hydrofluoric acid is a Solution (chemistry), solution of hydrogen fluoride (HF) in water. Solutions of HF are colourless, acidic and highly Corrosive substance, corrosive. It is used to make most fluorine-containing compounds; examples include th ...
(), possibly due to the formation of an impermeable
passive layer. Scandium turnings ignite in the air with a brilliant yellow flame to form
scandium oxide.
Isotopes
In nature, scandium is found exclusively as the
isotope 45Sc, which has a
nuclear spin
In atomic physics, the spin quantum number is a quantum number (designated ) which describes the intrinsic angular momentum (or spin angular momentum, or simply spin) of an electron or other particle. The phrase was originally used to describe th ...
of 7/2; this is its only stable isotope. Twenty-five
radioisotopes have been characterized with the most stable being
46Sc, which has a
half-life of 83.8 days;
47Sc, 3.35 days; the
positron
The positron or antielectron is the antiparticle or the antimatter counterpart of the electron. It has an electric charge of +1 '' e'', a spin of 1/2 (the same as the electron), and the same mass as an electron. When a positron collides ...
emitter
44Sc, 4 hours; and
48Sc, 43.7 hours. All of the remaining
radioactive isotopes have half-lives less than 4 hours, and the majority of these have half-lives less than 2 minutes. This element also has five
nuclear isomers, with the most stable being
44m2Sc (''t''
1/2 = 58.6 h).
The known isotopes of scandium range from
36Sc to
60Sc. The primary
decay mode
Radioactive decay (also known as nuclear decay, radioactivity, radioactive disintegration, or nuclear disintegration) is the process by which an unstable atomic nucleus loses energy by radiation. A material containing unstable nuclei is consid ...
at masses lower than the only stable isotope,
45Sc, is
electron capture, and the primary mode at masses above it is
beta emission. The primary
decay product
In nuclear physics, a decay product (also known as a daughter product, daughter isotope, radio-daughter, or daughter nuclide) is the remaining nuclide left over from radioactive decay. Radioactive decay often proceeds via a sequence of steps ( ...
s at atomic weights below
45Sc are
calcium isotopes and the primary products from higher atomic weights are
titanium isotopes.
Occurrence
In
Earth's crust
Earth's crust is Earth's thin outer shell of rock, referring to less than 1% of Earth's radius and volume. It is the top component of the lithosphere, a division of Earth's layers that includes the crust and the upper part of the mantle. The ...
, scandium is not rare. Estimates vary from 18 to 25 ppm, which is comparable to the abundance of
cobalt (20–30 ppm). Scandium is only the 50th most common element on Earth (35th most abundant in the crust), but it is the 23rd most common element in the
Sun.
However, scandium is distributed sparsely and occurs in trace amounts in many
minerals. Rare minerals from Scandinavia
and
Madagascar such as
thortveitite,
euxenite, and
gadolinite
Gadolinite, sometimes known as ytterbite, is a silicate mineral consisting principally of the silicates of cerium, lanthanum, neodymium, yttrium, beryllium, and iron with the formula . It is called gadolinite-(Ce) or gadolinite-(Y), depending on ...
are the only known concentrated sources of this element. Thortveitite can contain up to 45% of scandium in the form of
scandium oxide.
The stable form of scandium is created in
supernova
A supernova is a powerful and luminous explosion of a star. It has the plural form supernovae or supernovas, and is abbreviated SN or SNe. This transient astronomical event occurs during the last evolutionary stages of a massive star or when ...
s via the
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", ...
. Also, scandium is created by
cosmic ray spallation of the more abundant
iron nuclei.
*
28Si + 17n →
45Sc (r-process)
*
56Fe + p →
45Sc +
11C + n (cosmic ray spallation)
Production
The world production of scandium is in the order of 15–20 tonnes per year, in the form of
scandium oxide. The demand is about 50% higher, and both the production and demand keep increasing. In 2003, only three mines produced scandium: the uranium and
iron mines in
Zhovti Vody in
Ukraine, the rare-earth mines in
Bayan Obo,
China
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a country in East Asia. It is the world's most populous country, with a population exceeding 1.4 billion, slightly ahead of India. China spans the equivalent of five time zones and ...
, and the apatite mines in the
Kola peninsula,
Russia; since then many other countries have built scandium-producing facilities, including 5 tonnes/year (7.5 tonnes/year ) by
Nickel Asia Corporation and
Sumitomo Metal Mining
The is one of the largest Japanese '' keiretsu'', or business groups, founded by Masatomo Sumitomo (1585-1652) around 1615 during the early Edo period.
History
The Sumitomo Group traces its roots to a bookshop in Kyoto founded circa 1615 by Mas ...
in the
Philippines.
In the United States, NioCorp Development hopes to raise $1 billion toward opening a niobium mine at its Elk Creek site in southeast
Nebraska which may be able to produce as much as 95 tonnes of scandium oxide annually. In each case, scandium is a byproduct of the extraction of other elements and is sold as scandium oxide.
[Scandium](_blank)
USGS.
To produce metallic scandium, the oxide is converted to
scandium fluoride and then
reduced with metallic
calcium.
Madagascar and the
Iveland-
Evje region in
Norway have the only deposits of minerals with high scandium content,
thortveitite ) but these are not being exploited.
The mineral
kolbeckite has a very high scandium content but is not available in any larger deposits.
The absence of reliable, secure, stable, long-term production has limited the commercial applications of scandium. Despite this low level of use, scandium offers significant benefits. Particularly promising is the strengthening of aluminium alloys with as little as 0.5% scandium. Scandium-stabilized zirconia enjoys a growing market demand for use as a high-efficiency
electrolyte
An electrolyte is a medium containing ions that is electrically conducting through the movement of those ions, but not conducting electrons. This includes most soluble salts, acids, and bases dissolved in a polar solvent, such as water. Upon dis ...
in
solid oxide fuel cells.
The
USGS reports that, from 2015 to 2019 in the US, the price of small quantities of scandium ingot has been $107 to $134 per gram, and that of scandium oxide $4 to $5 per gram.
Compounds
Scandium chemistry is almost completely dominated by the trivalent ion, Sc
3+. The radii of M
3+ ions in the table below indicate that the chemical properties of scandium ions have more in common with yttrium ions than with aluminium ions. In part because of this similarity, scandium is often classified as a lanthanide-like element.
:
Oxides and hydroxides
The oxide
and the hydroxide are
amphoteric:
: + 3 → (scandate ion)
: + 3 + 3 →
α- and γ-ScOOH are isostructural with their
aluminium hydroxide oxide counterparts. Solutions of in water are acidic due to
hydrolysis.
Halides and pseudohalides
The
halide
In chemistry, a halide (rarely halogenide) is a binary chemical compound, of which one part is a halogen atom and the other part is an element or radical that is less electronegative (or more electropositive) than the halogen, to make a fluor ...
s , where X=
Cl,
Br, or
I, are very soluble in water, but
is insoluble. In all four halides, the scandium is 6-coordinated. The halides are
Lewis acids; for example,
dissolves in a solution containing excess fluoride ion to form . The coordination number 6 is typical for Sc(III). In the larger Y
3+ and La
3+ ions,
coordination numbers of 8 and 9 are common.
Scandium triflate is sometimes used as a
Lewis acid
A Lewis acid (named for the American physical chemist Gilbert N. Lewis) is a chemical species that contains an empty orbital which is capable of accepting an electron pair from a Lewis base to form a Lewis adduct. A Lewis base, then, is any sp ...
catalyst in
organic chemistry.
Organic derivatives
Scandium forms a series of organometallic compounds with
cyclopentadienyl Cyclopentadienyl can refer to
*Cyclopentadienyl anion, or cyclopentadienide,
**Cyclopentadienyl ligand
*Cyclopentadienyl radical, •
*Cyclopentadienyl cation,
See also
*Pentadienyl
In organic chemistry, pentadienyl refers to the organic radic ...
ligands (Cp), similar to the behavior of the lanthanides. One example is the chlorine-bridged dimer, and related derivatives of
pentamethylcyclopentadienyl ligands.
Uncommon oxidation states
Compounds that feature scandium in oxidation states other than +3 are rare but well characterized. The blue-black compound is one of the simplest. This material adopts a sheet-like structure that exhibits extensive bonding between the scandium(II) centers.
Scandium hydride is not well understood, although it appears not to be a
saline hydride of Sc(II).
As is observed for most elements, a diatomic scandium hydride has been observed spectroscopically at high temperatures in the gas phase.
Scandium borides and carbides are
non-stoichiometric
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 ...
, as is typical for neighboring elements.
[Holleman, A. F.; Wiberg, E. "Inorganic Chemistry" Academic Press: San Diego, 2001. .]
Lower oxidation states (+2, +1, 0) have also been observed in organoscandium compounds.
History
Dmitri Mendeleev
Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev (sometimes transliterated as Mendeleyev or Mendeleef) ( ; russian: links=no, Дмитрий Иванович Менделеев, tr. , ; 8 February Old_Style_and_New_Style_dates">O.S._27_January.html" ;"title="O ...
, who is referred to as the father of 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 ...
, predicted the existence of an element ''
ekaboron'', with an
atomic mass between 40 and 48 in 1869.
Lars Fredrik Nilson and his team
detected this element in the minerals
euxenite and
gadolinite
Gadolinite, sometimes known as ytterbite, is a silicate mineral consisting principally of the silicates of cerium, lanthanum, neodymium, yttrium, beryllium, and iron with the formula . It is called gadolinite-(Ce) or gadolinite-(Y), depending on ...
in 1879. Nilson prepared 2 grams of
scandium oxide of high purity.
He named the element scandium, from the
Latin ''Scandia'' meaning "Scandinavia". Nilson was apparently unaware of Mendeleev's prediction, but
Per Teodor Cleve recognized the correspondence and notified Mendeleev.
Metallic scandium was produced for the first time in 1937 by
electrolysis
In chemistry and manufacturing, electrolysis is a technique that uses direct electric current (DC) to drive an otherwise non-spontaneous chemical reaction. Electrolysis is commercially important as a stage in the separation of elements from n ...
of a
eutectic mixture of
potassium,
lithium, and
scandium chlorides, at 700–800 °
C. The first pound of 99% pure scandium metal was produced in 1960. Production of aluminium alloys began in 1971, following a US patent. Aluminium-scandium alloys were also developed in the
USSR.
Laser crystals of gadolinium-scandium-gallium garnet (GSGG) were used in strategic defense applications developed for the
Strategic Defense Initiative
The Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), derisively nicknamed the "''Star Wars'' program", was a proposed missile defense system intended to protect the United States from attack by ballistic strategic nuclear weapons (intercontinental ballistic ...
(SDI) in the 1980s and 1990s.
Red giant stars near the Galactic Center
In early 2018, evidence was gathered from
spectrometer
A spectrometer () is a scientific instrument used to separate and measure spectral components of a physical phenomenon. Spectrometer is a broad term often used to describe instruments that measure a continuous variable of a phenomenon where the ...
data of significant scandium,
vanadium
Vanadium is a chemical element with the symbol V and atomic number 23. It is a hard, silvery-grey, malleable transition metal. The elemental metal is rarely found in nature, but once isolated artificially, the formation of an oxide layer ( pas ...
, and
yttrium abundances in
red giant
A red giant is a luminous giant star of low or intermediate mass (roughly 0.3–8 solar masses ()) in a late phase of stellar evolution. The outer atmosphere is inflated and tenuous, making the radius large and the surface temperature around or ...
stars in the
Nuclear Star Cluster (NSC) in the
Galactic Center. Further research showed that this was an illusion caused by the relatively low temperature (below 3,500 K) of these stars masking the abundance signals, and that this phenomenon was observable in other red giants.
[Evidence against Anomalous Compositions for Giants in the Galactic Nuclear Star Cluster](_blank)
B. Thorsbro et al, The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 866, Number 1, 2018-10-10
Applications

The addition of scandium to aluminium limits the grain growth in the heat zone of welded aluminium components. This has two beneficial effects: the precipitated forms smaller crystals than in other
aluminium alloys,
and the volume of precipitate-free zones at the grain boundaries of age-hardening aluminium alloys is reduced.
The precipitate is a coherent precipitate that strengthens the aluminum matrix by applying elastic strain fields that inhibit dislocation movement (i.e., plastic deformation). has an equilibrium L1
2 superlattice structure exclusive to this system. A fine dispersion of nano scale precipitate can be achieved via heat treatment that can also strengthen the alloys through order hardening. Recent developments include the additions of transition metals such as Zr and rare earth metals like Er produce shells surrounding the spherical precipitate that reduce coarsening. These shells are dictated by the diffusivity of the alloying element and lower the cost of the alloy due to less Sc being substituted in part by Zr while maintaining stability and less Sc being needed to form the precipitate. These have made somewhat competitive with titanium alloys along with a wide array of applications. However,
titanium alloys, which are similar in lightness and strength, are cheaper and much more widely used.
The alloy is as strong as titanium, light as aluminium, and hard as some ceramics.
The main application of scandium by weight is in aluminium-scandium alloys for minor aerospace industry components. These alloys contain between 0.1% and 0.5% of scandium. They were used in Russian military aircraft, specifically the
Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21
The Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21 (russian: Микоян и Гуревич МиГ-21; NATO reporting name: Fishbed) is a supersonic jet aircraft, jet fighter aircraft, fighter and interceptor aircraft, designed by the Mikoyan, Mikoyan-Gurevich OKB, De ...
and
MiG-29
The Mikoyan MiG-29 (russian: Микоян МиГ-29; NATO reporting name: Fulcrum) is a twin-engine fighter aircraft designed in the Soviet Union. Developed by the Mikoyan design bureau as an air superiority fighter during the 1970s, the Mi ...
.
Some items of sports equipment, which rely on lightweight high-performance materials, have been made with scandium-aluminium alloys, including
baseball bats,
tent poles and
bicycle frames and
components
Circuit Component may refer to:
•Are devices that perform functions when they are connected in a circuit.
In engineering, science, and technology Generic systems
* System components, an entity with discrete structure, such as an assem ...
.
Lacrosse sticks are also made with scandium. The American firearm manufacturing company
Smith & Wesson produces semi-automatic pistols and revolvers with frames of scandium alloy and cylinders of titanium or carbon steel.
Dentists use erbium-chromium-doped yttrium-scandium-gallium garnet () lasers for cavity preparation and in endodontics.
The first scandium-based metal-halide lamps were patented by
General Electric and made in North America, although they are now produced in all major industrialized countries. Approximately 20 kg of scandium (as ) is used annually in the
United States for high-intensity discharge lamps.
[Hammond, C. R. in ''CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics'' 85th ed., Section 4; The Elements.] One type of
metal-halide lamp, similar to the
mercury-vapor lamp, is made from
scandium triiodide and
sodium iodide. This lamp is a white-light source with high
color rendering index that sufficiently resembles sunlight to allow good color-reproduction with
TV cameras. About 80 kg of scandium is used in metal-halide lamps/light bulbs globally per year.
The
radioactive isotope 46Sc is used in
oil refineries as a tracing agent.
Scandium triflate is a catalytic
Lewis acid
A Lewis acid (named for the American physical chemist Gilbert N. Lewis) is a chemical species that contains an empty orbital which is capable of accepting an electron pair from a Lewis base to form a Lewis adduct. A Lewis base, then, is any sp ...
used in
organic chemistry.
Health and safety
Elemental scandium is considered non-toxic, though extensive animal testing of scandium compounds has not been done. The
median lethal dose
In toxicology, the median lethal dose, LD50 (abbreviation for "lethal dose, 50%"), LC50 (lethal concentration, 50%) or LCt50 is a toxic unit that measures the lethal dose of a toxin, radiation, or pathogen. The value of LD50 for a substance is the ...
(LD
50) levels for
scandium chloride for rats have been determined as 755 mg/kg for
intraperitoneal and 4 g/kg for oral administration. In the light of these results, compounds of scandium should be handled as compounds of moderate toxicity. Scandium appears to be handled by the body in a manner similar to
gallium
Gallium is a chemical element with the symbol Ga and atomic number 31. Discovered by French chemist Paul-Émile Lecoq de Boisbaudran in 1875, Gallium is in group 13 of the periodic table and is similar to the other metals of the group (aluminiu ...
, with similar hazards involving its poorly soluble
hydroxide.
See also
*
Rare-earth element
References
Further reading
*
External links
Scandiumat ''
The Periodic Table of Videos'' (University of Nottingham)
WebElements.com – Scandium*
{{Good article
Chemical elements
Transition metals
Chemical elements with hexagonal close-packed structure
Chemical elements predicted by Dmitri Mendeleev