Difference between revisions of "Osmium"
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* [[Ruthenium]] – also a rather rare and expensive element | * [[Ruthenium]] – also a rather rare and expensive element | ||
* [[Iron]] – [[abundant elements|tremendously abundant]] much less noble | * [[Iron]] – [[abundant elements|tremendously abundant]] much less noble | ||
− | * Hassium – The artificial element highly radioactive element (longest half live | + | * Hassium – The artificial element highly radioactive element (longest half live time 110s) <br>See: [[Artificial short lived elements]] |
== External links == | == External links == | ||
* Wikipedia: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmium Osmium] | * Wikipedia: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmium Osmium] |
Latest revision as of 12:02, 15 June 2021
Osmium is a rather rare and accordingly expensive element.
Thus it is of no real interest for macrostructural applications.
Interesting trivia:
- Osmium is the densest naturally occurring element (22.59 g/ccm). – See: Ultimate limits
- It's oxide is a (rather toxic) transparent liquid.
Ruthenium (same group) and Rhenium (to the left) do that too. – See: Oddball compounds
Osmiums group members are:
- Ruthenium – also a rather rare and expensive element
- Iron – tremendously abundant much less noble
- Hassium – The artificial element highly radioactive element (longest half live time 110s)
See: Artificial short lived elements
External links
- Wikipedia: Osmium