Catalog Number
ACM7440622-5
Product Name
Vanadium single crystal disc, 10mm (0.39in) dia, 1-3mm (0.04-0.1in) thick, (110) orientation, ±0.5°
Category
Metal; Single Crystals
Description
Silvery-whitish powder. Resists corrosion.;Liquid; OtherSolid; PelletsLargeCrystals
Molecular Weight
50.941g/mol
InChI Key
LEONUFNNVUYDNQ-UHFFFAOYSA-N
Purity
99.9%, 99.99%, 99.999%
Density
Specific gravity: 6.11 at 18.7 °C
Solubility
Insoluble in water;Soluble in nitric, hydrofluoric, and concentrated sulfuric acids; attacked by alkali, forming water soluble vanadates
Color/Form
Light gray or white lustrous powder, fused hard lumps or body-centered cubic crystals;Pure vanadium is a bright white metal; soft and ductile;Gray-white metal; cubic;Steel gray with a bluish tinge
Covalently-Bonded Unit Count
1
Electrical Resistivity
25.4 microhm-cm @ 20 oC °C
Hazard Statements
H228-H315-H319-
Heat of Vaporization
458.6 kJ/mol
MeSH Entry Terms
Vanadium;Vanadium 51;Vanadium-51
Monoisotopic Mass
50.943957g/mol
Other Experimental
Two naturally occurring isotopes: (51)V (99.75%): (50)V (0.25%); the latter is radioactive: Half-life 6X10+15 years;Vanadium metal oxidizes readily above 660 °C;Vanadium is resistant to attack by hydrochloric or dilute sulfuric acid and to alkali solutions. It is also quite resistant to corrosion by seawater but is reactive toward nitric, hydrofluoric, or concentrated sulfuric acids. Galvanic corrosion tests run in simulated seawater indicate that vanadium is anodic with respect to stainless steel and copper but cathodic to aluminum and magnesium. Vanadium exhibits corrosion resistance to liquid metals, (e.g., bismuth and low oxygen sodium).;Vanadium has oxidation states of +2, +3, +4, +5; when heated in air at different temperatures, it oxidizes to a brownish black trioxide, a blue black tetraoxide, or a reddish orange pentoxide. It reacts with chlorine at fairly low temperatures (180 °C) forming vanadium tetrachloride and with carbon and nitrogen at high temperatures forming VC and VN, respectively. The pure metal in massive form is relatively inert toward oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen at room temperature.;Crystal structure body-centered cubic; lattice constant, 0.3026 nm; specific heat, 0.50 J/g at 20-100 °C; latent heat of fusion, 16.02 kJ/mol; enthalpy, 5.27 kJ/mol at 25 °C; entropy, 29.5 kJ/mol °C at 25 °C; thermal conductivity, 0.31 W/cm deg K at 100 °C; electrical resistance, 24.8-26.0 microohm cm at 20 °C; magnetic susceptibility 0.11 cu m/mol; superconductivity transition temperature, 5.13 K; recrystallization temperature, 800-1000 °C; modulus of elasticity, (1.2-1.3)X10+5 MPa;Vanadium is ductile and can be forged or rolled at room temperature. ... On prolonged storage it becomes bluish-gray to brownish-black ...;Enthalpy of formation (gas), 514.2 kJ/mol; molar heat capacity at 298.15 K, 24.9 J/ mol K (crystal); 26.0 J/mol K (gas);Enthalpy of fusion, 21.5 kJ/mol at 1910 °C;Not tarnished in air and not appreciably affected by moisture at ordinary temperatures. ...Not attacked by hot or cold hydrochloric acid, by cold sulfuric acid. Reacts with hot sulfuric acid, hydrofluoric acid, nitric acid, aqua regia. Not attacked by bromine water or by aqueous alkalies. Specific heat (20 to 100 °C) 0.12 cal/g/deg C.;Valences = 2, 3, 4, 5; acts as either a metal or a nonmetal and forms a variety of complex compounds ... resistant to corrosion ...;Vanadium has good structural strength and a low fission neutron cross section, making it useful in nuclear applications;Vandium isotopes - decay pathways[Table#2712];Vanadium decay pathways;Table: Naturally Occuring [Table#2713];Vanadium decay pathways;Table: Artificial isotopes [Table#2714]
Precautionary Statements
P210-P261-P280-P305+P351+P338-P405-P501
Refractive Index
Index of refraction = 3.03
Stability
Stable under recommended storage conditions.;... Oxidizes readily above 660 °C.
Vapor Pressure
2.34X10-2 mm Hg at 1916 °C /Extrapolated/