
Understanding Vanadium from Vanadinite — The Rainbow-Blooded Metal Named for a Goddess
Vanadium (V, element 23) is named after Vanadís, a byname of the Norse goddess Freyja — an unusually poetic origin for a chemical element. The name was chosen by Swedish chemist Nils Gabriel Sefström, who rediscovered the element in 1831, because vanadium compounds display an extraordinary range of vivid colors: yellow (V₂O₅), blue (VO²⁺), green (V³⁺), and violet (V²⁺). This chromatic wealth was deemed worthy of the goddess of beauty and fertility.
Vanadium was actually first discovered by Andrés Manuel del Río in Mexico City in 1801, who found it in a lead ore (vanadinite, Pb₅(VO₄)₃Cl) from Zimapán. He initially named it 'erythronium' (from Greek for 'red') but retracted his claim after a French chemist incorrectly told him it was just chromium. Sefström's independent rediscovery 30 years later confirmed del Río's original finding — one of the saddest priority disputes in chemistry.
Vanadinite (Pb₅(VO₄)₃Cl) is a lead vanadate chloride containing approximately 10.8% vanadium and 73.2% lead. It is one of the most strikingly beautiful minerals — brilliant orange, red, or yellow hexagonal crystals that are prized by mineral collectors. Vanadium is primarily produced from magnetite ores that contain vanadium as a minor component, not from vanadinite.
HAZARD: Vanadium pentoxide (V₂O₅) dust is toxic — it irritates the respiratory tract and causes bronchitis, pneumonia, and pulmonary edema with significant exposure. Vanadinite is a LEAD mineral — all lead compounds are toxic. Handle vanadinite with gloves and wash hands afterward. Do not grind or crush vanadinite without respiratory protection.
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