សិល្បៈ
សម្រស់ និង សុខុមាលភាព
សិប្បកម្ម
វប្បធម៌ និង ប្រវត្តិសាស្ត្រ
ការកម្សាន្ត
បរិស្ថាន
ម្ហូប និង ភេសជ្ជៈ
អនាគតបៃតង
វិស្វកម្មបញ្ច្រាស
វិទ្យាសាស្ត្រ
កីឡា
បច្ចេកវិទ្យា
ប្រដាប់ដែលស្លៀក
Understanding Lanthanum from Monazite — The Hidden Element That Bends Light
Peter

Created by

Peter

14. ឧសភា 2026SE
0
0
0
9
0

Understanding Lanthanum from Monazite — The Hidden Element That Bends Light

មធ្យម

Instructions

1

Understand Lanthanum's Discovery

Carl Gustaf Mosander discovered lanthanum in 1839 by carefully reprocessing cerium oxide, which earlier chemists had assumed was pure. He separated a new oxide that he named lanthanum from Greek 'lanthanein' (to lie hidden) — because it had been hiding inside cerium oxide for decades. This pattern repeated throughout the 19th century as chemists discovered one rare earth after another lurking inside supposedly pure samples of their neighbors.
2

Identify Lanthanum Sources in Monazite and Bastnasite

Lanthanum is the third most abundant rare earth element at 39 ppm in Earth's crust — more common than lead or tin. Bastnasite (La,Ce)CO₃F at Bayan Obo (China) and Mountain Pass (California) contains 25-30% lanthanum oxide. Monazite (Ce,La,Nd)PO₄ from beach sands in Australia, India, and Brazil carries 20-25% La₂O₃. These two minerals account for over 95% of rare earth production worldwide.

Tools needed:

Hand Lens (10x Magnification)Hand Lens (10x Magnification)
3

Trace the Rare Earth Extraction Process

Bastnasite is roasted to remove CO₂, then leached with hydrochloric acid. Monazite requires hot sodium hydroxide attack to break down the phosphate matrix. The resulting rare earth chloride or hydroxide solution contains all 15 lanthanides mixed together. Solvent extraction with organophosphoric acids in counter-current mixer-settler cascades separates individual elements. Lanthanum, being the lightest, emerges first from the cascade.

Tools needed:

Safety GogglesSafety Goggles
Chemical-Resistant GlovesChemical-Resistant Gloves
4

Examine Lanthanum Metal Properties

Lanthanum is a soft, silvery-white metal that tarnishes rapidly in air, forming a white oxide coating. It is the softest lanthanide — easily cut with a knife. Melting point is 920°C, density 6.15 g/cm³. Unlike most rare earths, lanthanum has no unpaired 4f electrons and is therefore diamagnetic and colorless in solution. Lanthanum metal powder is pyrophoric and must be handled under inert atmosphere.
5

Explore Optical Glass Applications

Lanthanum oxide (La₂O₃) is the most important rare earth in optics — adding 20-40% to glass produces high-refractive-index, low-dispersion lenses essential for camera objectives, telescopes, and binoculars. Lanthanum glass bends light strongly without splitting colors, enabling sharper images with fewer lens elements. Every high-quality camera lens from Canon, Nikon, and Leica contains multiple lanthanum glass elements.
6

Understand Fluid Catalytic Cracking

Lanthanum-exchanged zeolite Y is the primary catalyst for fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) — the refinery process that converts heavy crude oil fractions into gasoline. Lanthanum stabilizes the zeolite crystal structure at the 700°C cracking temperatures and increases catalytic activity. Every oil refinery on Earth uses lanthanum-containing FCC catalysts. This single application consumes approximately 25% of global lanthanum production.
7

Discover Nickel-Metal Hydride Batteries

Lanthanum-nickel alloy (LaNi₅) absorbs hydrogen reversibly at room temperature and moderate pressure — the basis of nickel-metal hydride (NiMH) battery negative electrodes. The Toyota Prius and other hybrid vehicles used NiMH batteries containing 10-15 kg of lanthanum-rich mischmetal per pack. Though lithium-ion batteries are replacing NiMH in full EVs, NiMH remains preferred for hybrids due to superior safety and cycle life.
8

Survey Mischmetal and Lighter Flint Uses

Mischmetal — an unseparated alloy of cerium (50%), lanthanum (25%), neodymium (18%), and praseodymium (5%) — is the cheapest rare earth product because it requires no separation. Alloyed with 30% iron, it forms ferrocerium, the 'flint' in cigarette lighters and fire steels. Striking ferrocerium shears off particles that oxidize instantly at 3,000°C. Mischmetal is also added to steel and cast iron to remove sulfur and oxygen impurities.
9

Examine Phosphor and Ceramic Uses

Lanthanum phosphate (LaPO₄) doped with cerium and terbium creates the green phosphor in fluorescent lamps. Lanthanum chromite (LaCrO₃) is a high-temperature electronic conductor used as interconnects in solid oxide fuel cells. Lanthanum manganite serves as the cathode material. Lanthanum-barium-copper oxide was among the first high-temperature superconductors discovered in 1986, earning Bednorz and Müller the Nobel Prize.
10

Document Findings and Market Position

Record lanthanum's key data: atomic number 57, density 6.15 g/cm³, melting point 920°C, soft silvery-white metal. Lanthanum is the most abundant and cheapest rare earth — priced at $2-5 per kilogram of oxide, compared to $200+ for dysprosium or terbium. China controls 70% of global rare earth production. Lanthanum's abundance makes it the 'workhorse' rare earth: applications that can use lanthanum instead of scarcer lanthanides should.

Tools needed:

Precision Scale (0.01g)Precision Scale (0.01g)

Tools Required

4

Connected Blueprint Materials

CC0 Public Domain

This blueprint is released under CC0. You are free to copy, modify, distribute, and use this work for any purpose, without asking permission.

Support the Maker by purchasing products through their Blueprint where they earn a Maker Commission set by Vendors, or create a new iteration of this Blueprint and include it as a connection in your own Blueprint to share revenue.

ការពិភាក្សា

(0)

ចូល ដើម្បីចូលរួមពិភាក្សា

កំពុងផ្ទុកមតិ...