
Extracting Nickel from Pentlandite — The Devil's Copper That Wouldn't Behave
Nickel (Ni, element 28) gets its name from the German Kupfernickel — 'Old Nick's copper' or 'the Devil's copper.' Saxonian miners in the Erzgebirge encountered a reddish-brown ore (now called nickeline, NiAs) that resembled copper ore but yielded no copper when smelted. They blamed the mischievous sprite Nickel (a diminutive of Nicholas, used as a name for a troublesome goblin) for bewitching the copper. Swedish mineralogist Axel Fredrik Cronstedt isolated metallic nickel in 1751 by heating nickeline with charcoal, proving it was a distinct metal.
Pentlandite ((Fe,Ni)₉S₈) is the world's primary nickel ore mineral, typically containing 22–42% nickel. It occurs almost exclusively in magmatic sulfide deposits — massive concentrations of metal sulfides that crystallized from sulfide-rich magma deep in the Earth's crust. The two largest deposits on Earth, Sudbury (Ontario, Canada) and Norilsk (Siberia, Russia), together supply a large fraction of the world's nickel.
The extraction of nickel from pentlandite follows a roast-reduce sequence: roasting converts the sulfide to nickel oxide (NiO), and carbon reduction at high temperature produces metallic nickel. The process is complicated by the iron content — pentlandite contains both iron and nickel, and separating them requires careful control of roasting conditions or a matte-smelting step.
HAZARD: Nickel compounds are classified as Group 1 carcinogens (confirmed human carcinogens) by IARC. Nickel dust and nickel oxide dust cause lung and nasal cancer with chronic exposure. Nickel is also one of the most common contact allergens — approximately 10–20% of women and 1–3% of men are sensitized. All work must use respiratory protection and gloves. Roasting produces sulfur dioxide (SO₂), a toxic, choking gas — work outdoors only.
Contenuto pericoloso
Questo blueprint contiene procedure pericolose. Accedi e abilita i contenuti pericolosi nelle impostazioni del tuo account per visualizzare le istruzioni passo dopo passo.
CC0 Pubblico dominio
Questo progetto è rilasciato sotto CC0. Sei libero di copiare, modificare, distribuire e utilizzare quest'opera per qualsiasi scopo, senza chiedere permesso.
Supporta il Maker acquistando prodotti tramite il suo progetto dove guadagna una Commissione Maker stabilita dai venditori, oppure crea una nuova iterazione di questo progetto e includilo come collegamento nel tuo progetto per condividere i ricavi.