'Gadolinium' (
IPA: ) is a
chemical element in the
periodic table that has the symbol 'Gd' and
atomic number 64.
__TOC__

Gadolinium >99.9% purity
Notable characteristics
Gadolinium is a silvery white,
malleable and
ductile rare earth metal with a metallic luster. It crystallizes in
hexagonal, close-packed alpha form at room temperature, but when heated to 1508
K or more, it transforms into its beta form, which has a
body-centered cubic structure.
Unlike other rare earth elements, gadolinium is relatively stable in dry air. However, it tarnishes quickly in ''moist'' air and forms a loosely-adhering
oxide that spalls off, and then exposes more surface to oxidation. Gadolinium reacts slowly with water, and it is soluble in dilute acids.
Gadolinium has the highest
thermal neutron capture cross-section of any (known) element, 49,000
barns, but it also has a fast burn-out rate, limiting its usefulness as a
nuclear control rod material.
Gadolinium becomes
superconductive below a critical temperature of 1.083 K. It is strongly
paramagnetic at room temperature, and exhibits
ferromagnetic properties below room temperature.
Gadolinium demonstrates a
magnetocaloric effect whereby its temperature increases when it enters a magnetic field and decreases when it leaves the magnetic field. The effect is considerably stronger for the gadolinium
alloy Gd5(
Si2Ge2)
[1].
Applications
Gadolinium is used for making
gadolinium yttrium garnets, which have
microwave applications, and gadolinium compounds are used for making
phosphors for colour
TV tubes. Gadolinium is also used for manufacturing
compact discs and
computer memory.
Gadolinium is used in
nuclear marine propulsion systems as a
burnable poison. The gadolinium slows the initial reaction rate, but as it decays other
neutron poisons accumulate, allowing for long-running cores. Gadolinium is also used as a secondary, emergency shut-down measure in some nuclear reactors, particularly of the
CANDU type.
Gadolinium also possesses unusual
metallurgic properties, with as little as 1% of gadolinium improving the workability and resistance of
iron,
chromium and related
alloys to high temperatures and
oxidation.
Because of their
paramagnetic properties, solutions of
organic gadolinium
complexes and gadolinium compounds are used as
intravenous radiocontrast agents to enhance images in medical
magnetic resonance imaging.
Magnevist is the most widespread example.
Besides
MRI, gadolinium (Gd) is also used in other imaging. In
X-ray, gadolinium is contained in the phosphor layer suspending in a polymer matrix at the detector.
Terbium-
doped gadolinium oxysulfide (Gd
2O
2S: Tb) at the phosphor layer is to convert the X-rays releasing from the source into light. Gd can emit at 540nm (green light
spectrum = 520 – 570nm), which is very useful for enhancing the imaging quality of the
X-ray that are exposed to the photographic film. Beside Gd's spectrum range, the compound also has a K-edge at 50 kiloelectron volt (keV), which means its absorption of
X-ray through
photoelectric interactions is great. The energy conversion of Gd is up to 20%, which means, one-fifth of the X-ray striking on the phosphor layer can be converted into light photons.
Gadolinium oxyorthosilicate (GSO) is a single crystal that is used as a
scintillator in medical imaging equipment like as
Positron Emission Tomography (PET). Another new scintillator for detecting neutrons is
cerium-doped
gadolinium orthosilicate (GSO - Gd
2SiO
5:Ce).
Gadolinium gallium garnet (Gd
3Ga
5O
12) is a material with good optical properties, and is used in fabrication of various optical components and as substrate material for magneto–optical films.
In the future,
gadolinium ethyl sulfate, which has extremely low noise characteristics, may be used in
masers. Furthermore, gadolinium's high magnetic movement and low
Curie temperature (which lies just at room temperature) suggest applications as a magnetic component for sensing hot and cold.
Due to extremely high neutron cross-section of gadolinium, this element is very effective for use with
neutron radiography.
History
In
1880,
Swiss chemist Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac observed spectroscopic lines due to gadolinium in samples of
didymium and
gadolinite;
French chemist
Paul Émile Lecoq de Boisbaudran separated
gadolinia, the
oxide of Gadolinium, from Mosander's
yttria in
1886. The element itself was isolated only recently.
Gadolinium, like the mineral
gadolinite, is named after
Finnish chemist and
geologist Johan Gadolin.
In older literature the natural form of the element is often called an "earth", meaning that element came from the Earth. Accordingly, gadolinium is the element that comes from the earth, gadolinia. Earths are compounds of the element and one or more other elements. The two most common combining-elements are oxygen and sulfur. For example, gadolinia contains gadolinium oxide (Gd
2O
3).
Biological role
Gadolinium has no known native biological role, but in research on biological systems it has a few roles. It is used as a component of MRI contrast agents as in the 3+ oxidation state the metal has 7 unpaired f electrons. This causes water around the contrast agent to relax quickly enhancing the quality of the MRI scan. Secondly as a member of the
lanthanides it is used in various
Ion Channel electrophysiology experiments where it is used to block sodium leak channels as well as to stretch activated ion channels.
Occurrence
Gadolinium is never found in nature as the free element, but is contained in many rare minerals such as
monazite and
bastnäsite. It occurs only in trace amounts in the mineral
gadolinite which was also named after
Johan Gadolin. Today, it is prepared by
ion exchange and
solvent extraction techniques, or by the reduction of its anhydrous fluoride with metallic
calcium.
Value
In
1994, the cost of gadolinium was about
US$ 0.12 per
gram, and it has only increased in value by about US$ 0.01 per gram since then.
[2]:
::1994.....$55 per
pound (or $0.121 per gram)
::1995.....$55 per pound (or $0.121 per gram)
::1996.....$115 per
kilogram (or $0.115 per gram)
::1997.....$115 per kilogram (or $0.115 per gram)
::1998.....$115 per kilogram (or $0.115 per gram)
::1999.....$115 per kilogram (or $0.115 per gram)
::2000.....$130 per kilogram (or $0.13 per gram)
::2001.....$130 per kilogram (or $0.13 per gram)
::2002.....$130 per kilogram (or $0.13 per gram)
::2003.....$130 per kilogram (or $0.13 per gram)
::2004.....$130 per kilogram (or $0.13 per gram)
::2005.....$130 per kilogram (or $0.13 per gram)
Compounds
Compounds of gadolinium include:
★
Fluorides
★
★
GdF3
★
Chlorides
★
★
GdCl3
★
Bromides
★
★
GdBr3
★
Iodides
★
★
GdI3
★
Oxides
★
★
Gd2O3
★
Sulfides
★
★
Gd2S3
★
Nitrides
★
★
GdN
★
Organics
★
★
gadodiamide
''See also .''
Isotopes
Main articles: Isotopes of gadolinium
Naturally occurring gadolinium is composed of 5 stable
isotopes,
154Gd,
155Gd,
156Gd,
157Gd and
158Gd, and 2
radioisotopes,
152Gd and
160Gd, with
158Gd being the most abundant (24.84%
natural abundance).
Thirty radioisotopes have been characterized, with the most stable being
160Gd with a
half-life of more than 1.3×10
21 years (the decay has not been observed - only the lower limit on the half-life is known), alpha-decaying
152Gd with a half-life of 1.08×10
14 years, and
150Gd with a half-life of 1.79×10
6 years. All of the remaining isotopes are radioactive, having half-lives less than 74.7 years. The majority of these have half-lives less than 24.6 seconds. Gadolinium isotopes have 4 metastable
isomers, with the most stable being
143mGd (t
½ 110 seconds),
145mGd (t
½ 85 seconds) and
141mGd (t
½ 24.5 seconds).
The primary
decay mode at atomic weights lower than the most abundant stable isotope,
158Gd, is
electron capture, and the primary mode at higher atomic weights is
beta decay. The primary
decay products for isotopes of weights lower than
158Gd are the element Eu (
europium) isotopes and the primary products at higher weights are the element Tb (
terbium) isotopes.
Gadolinium-153 has a half-life of 240.4 ±10 days and emits gamma radiation with strong peaks at 41keV and 102keV. It is used as a gamma ray source in x-ray absorptiometry or bone density gauges for
osteoporosis screening, and in the Lixiscope portable x-ray imaging system.
Precautions
As with the other lanthanides, gadolinium compounds are of low to moderate
toxicity, although their toxicity has not been investigated in detail. Also, in patients on dialysis, there are data suggesting that it may cause
nephrogenic fibrosing dermopathy.
[3]
References
1. MAGNETIC REFRIGERATOR SUCCESSFULLY TESTED Karl Gschneidner, Jr. and Kerry Gibson
2. Rare Earths, James B. Hedrick, , , USGS Commodity Statistics and Information, 1994
3. Grobner T. Related Articles, Gadolinium--a specific trigger for the development of nephrogenic fibrosing dermopathy and nephrogenic systemic fibrosis? Nephrol Dial Transplant. 2006 Apr;21(4):1104-8. Epub 2006 Jan 23.
★
Los Alamos National Laboratory – Gadolinium
External links
★
WebElements.com – Gadolinium
★
Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis – Complication of Gadolinium MR Contrast
★
It's Elemental – Gadolinium
★
refrigerator uses gadolinium metal that heats up when exposed to magnetic field