
Extracting Manganese from Pyrolusite — The Cave Painter's Black That Cleans Glass
Manganese (Mn, element 25) has been used unknowingly for over 17,000 years — Paleolithic cave painters at Lascaux and Altamira used manganese dioxide (pyrolusite, MnO₂) as a black pigment. Ancient Roman glassmakers called it sapo vitri ('glass soap') because adding small amounts of manganese dioxide to molten glass neutralized the green color caused by iron impurities, producing clear, colorless glass. This decolorizing trick was known for centuries before anyone realized manganese was a distinct element.
Swedish chemist Johan Gottlieb Gahn first isolated metallic manganese in 1774 by reducing pyrolusite (MnO₂) with charcoal in a crucible — the same year his colleague Carl Wilhelm Scheele identified chlorine by reacting pyrolusite with hydrochloric acid. Pyrolusite is the most common and most important manganese mineral, containing 63.2% manganese by mass.
The extraction is straightforward in principle: carbon reduces manganese dioxide at high temperature: MnO₂ + 2C → Mn + 2CO. However, manganese has a high melting point (1246 °C) and oxidizes rapidly in air, making it challenging to produce a coherent metal sample. The product is typically a brittle, grey-white metallic mass that tarnishes quickly.
HAZARD: Manganese dust is a serious neurotoxin. Chronic inhalation of manganese compounds causes manganism — a progressive, irreversible neurological disease with symptoms resembling Parkinson's disease. All work with manganese ore and dust requires effective respiratory protection (P100 filters). Work outdoors during roasting and reduction.
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