'Germanium' (
IPA: ) is a
chemical element in the
periodic table that has the symbol 'Ge' and
atomic number 32. This is a lustrous, hard, silver-white
metalloid that is chemically similar to
tin. Germanium forms a large number of
organometallic compounds and is an important
semiconductor material used in
transistors.
Notable characteristics
Germanium is a hard, grayish-white element that has a metallic luster and the same crystal structure as
diamond. In addition, it is important to note that germanium is a semiconductor, with electrical properties between those of a
metal and an
insulator. In its pure state, this metalloid is
crystalline, brittle and retains its
lustre in air at room temperature.
Zone refining techniques have led to the production of crystalline germanium for
semiconductors that have an impurity of only one part in 10
10. Along with
gallium,
bismuth,
antimony and
water, it is one of the few substances that expands as it solidifies. The oxide form,
Germanium dioxide, also has the unusual property of having a high refractive index for visible light, but transparent to
infrared light.
History
In
1871, germanium (
Latin ''Germania'' for
Germany) was one of the elements that
Dmitri Mendeleev predicted to exist as a missing
analogue of the
silicon group (Mendeleev called it "
ekasilicon"). The existence of this element was proven by
Clemens Winkler in
1886. This discovery was an important confirmation of Mendeleev's idea of element periodicity.
Property |
Ekasilicon |
Germanium |
|---|
atomic mass |
72 |
72.59 |
density (g/cm³) |
5.5 |
5.35 |
melting point (°C) |
high |
947 |
color |
gray |
gray |
The development of the germanium transistor opened the door to countless applications of
solid state electronics. From
1950 through the early
1970s, this area provided an increasing market for germanium, but then high purity silicon began replacing germanium in transistors,
diodes, and rectifiers. Silicon has superior electrical properties, but requires much higher purity samples—a purity which could not be commercially achieved in the early days. Meanwhile, demand for germanium in
fiber optics communication networks, infrared
night vision systems, and polymerization catalysts increased dramatically. These end uses represented 85% of worldwide germanium consumption for
2000.
Applications
Unlike most semiconductors, germanium has a small
band gap, allowing it to efficiently respond to
infrared light. It is therefore used in infrared
spectroscopes and other optical equipment which require extremely sensitive infrared detectors. Its oxide's
index of refraction and dispersion properties make germanium useful in wide-angle
camera lenses and in
microscope objective lenses.
Germanium transistors are still used in some
stompboxes by musicians who wish to reproduce the distinctive tonal character of the
"fuzz"-tone from the early
rock and roll era, most notably the
Dallas Arbiter Fuzz Face. Vintage
stompboxes known to contain germanium transistors have shown marked increases in collector value for this reason alone.
Germanium is a highly important
infra-red optical material and can be readily cut and polished into lenses and windows. It is used particularly as the front optic in thermal imaging cameras working in the 8 to 14 micron wavelength range for passive thermal imaging and for hot-spot detection in military and fire fighting applications. The material has a very high
refractive index (4.0) and so needs to be anti-reflection coated. Particularly, a very hard special antireflection coating of diamond-like carbon (DLC) (refractive index 2.0)is a good match and produces a diamond-hard surface that can withstand much environmental rough treatment.
The alloy Silicon germanide (commonly referred to as "silicon-germanium", or
SiGe) is rapidly becoming an important semiconductor material, for use in high speed integrated circuits. Circuits utilising the properties of Si-SiGe junctions can be much faster than those using silicon alone.

Germanium bowl
Other uses:
★
Alloying agent (see below)
★ Phosphor in
fluorescent lamps
★
catalyst
★ High purity germanium single crystal detectors can precisely identify radiation sources (e.g. for airport security)
★ Germanium substrate wafers for high-efficiency multi-junction solar cells for space applications
Certain compounds of germanium have low toxicity to
mammals, but have toxic effects against certain
bacteria. This property makes these compounds useful as chemotherapeutic agents.
Germanium is useful for
single crystal neutron or
synchrotron X-ray monochromator for
beamlines. The reflectivity has advantages over silicon in neutron and
High energy X-ray applications.
High purity Germanium crystals are used in
detectors for
gamma spectroscopy.
FDA research has concluded that germanium, when used as a nutritional supplement, "presents potential human health hazard".
[1]
In recent years germanium has seen increasing use in precious metal alloys. In
sterling silver alloys, for instance, it has been found to reduce
firescale, increase tarnish resistance, and increase the alloy's response to precipitation hardening (see
Argentium sterling silver).
Occurrence
This element is found in
argyrodite (
sulfide of germanium and
silver);
coal;
germanite;
zinc ores; and other
minerals.
See also ''
Germanium is obtained commercially from zinc ore processing smelter dust and from the
combustion by-products of certain coals. A large reserve of this element is therefore in coal sources.
This metalloid can be extracted from other metals by fractional
distillation of its volatile tetrachloride. This technique permits the production of ultra-high purity germanium.
Value
In
1998 the cost of germanium was about
US$3 per
gram. The year end price for zone-refined germanium has (generally) decreased since then
[2]:
::2000.....$1,150 per
kilogram (or $1.15 per gram)
::2001.....$890 per kilogram (or $0.89 per gram)
::2002.....$620 per kilogram (or $0.62 per gram)
::2003.....$380 per kilogram (or $0.38 per gram)
::2004.....$600 per kilogram (or $0.60 per gram)
::2005.....$610 per kilogram (or $0.61 per gram)
::2006.....$720 per kilogram (or $0.72 per gram)
::2007.....$460 per kilogram (or $0.46 per gram)
Compounds
Some
inorganic germanium compounds include
Germane or
Germanium tetrahydride (GeH
4),
Germanium tetrachloride (GeCl
4),
and
Germanium dioxide (germania) (GeO
2). Some
organic compounds of germanium include tetramethylgermane or tetramethyl germanium, (Ge(CH
3)
4), and tetraethylgermane or tetraethyl germanium, (Ge(C
2H
5)
4). Recently a new organogermanium compound
isobutylgermane ((CH
3)
2CHCH
2GeH
3), was reported as the less hazardous liquid substitute for toxic
germane gas in
semiconductor applications.
;See also
★
★
Germane
★
Germanide
Properties
Pure germanium is known to spontaneously extrude very long
screw dislocations, referred to as 'germanium whiskers'. The growth of these whiskers is one of the primary reasons for the failure of older diodes and transistors made from germanium, as, depending on what they end up touching, they may lead to an electrical short.
References
★
Los Alamos National Laboratory – Germanium
1. Hazard Assessment of Germanium Supplements, Tao, S.H. and Bolger, P.M., , , Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology, 1997
2. Germanium, , , , U.S. Geological Survey Mineral Commodity Summaries, 2006
External links
★
WebElements.com – Germanium