|-
|
182W || 26.50% || colspan="4" | W is
stable with 108
neutrons
|-
|
183W || 14.31% || colspan="4" | W is
stable with 109
neutrons
|-
|
184W || 30.64% || colspan="4" | W is
stable with 110
neutrons
|-
|
186W || 28.43% || colspan="4" | W is
stable with 112
neutrons
'Tungsten' (
IPA: ), also called 'wolfram' (
IPA: ), is a
chemical element that has the symbol 'W' (
German: ''wolfram'') and
atomic number 74. A very hard, heavy, steel-gray to white
transition metal, tungsten is found in several
ores including
wolframite and
scheelite and is remarkable for its robust physical properties, especially the fact that it has the highest
melting point of all the non-
alloyed metals and the second highest of all the elements after
carbon. The pure form is used mainly in electrical applications but its many compounds and alloys are widely used in many applications, most notably in
light bulb filaments, in
X-ray tubes (as both the filament and target), and in
superalloys. Tungsten is the only metal from the third transition series that is known to occur in biomolecules.
Notable characteristics
Pure tungsten is steel-gray to tin-white and is a hard metal. Tungsten can be cut with a
hacksaw when it is very pure (it is brittle and hard to work when impure) and is otherwise worked by
forging,
drawing,
extruding, or
sintering. This element has the highest
melting point (3422 °
C) (6192 °
F), lowest
vapor pressure and the highest
tensile strength at temperatures above 1650 °C (3000 °F) of all metals. Tungsten has the lowest
coefficient of thermal expansion of any pure metal. Its corrosion resistance is excellent and it can be attacked only slightly by most
mineral acids. Tungsten metal forms a protective
oxide when exposed to air but can be oxidized at high temperature.
Steel alloyed with small quantities of tungsten greatly increases its toughness.
Applications
Tungsten is a metal with a wide range of uses, the largest of which is as
tungsten carbide (W
2C, WC) in cemented
carbides. Cemented carbides (also called hardmetals) are wear-resistant materials used by the metalworking,
mining,
petroleum and construction industries. Tungsten is widely used in
light bulb and
vacuum tube filaments, as well as
electrodes, because it can be drawn into very thin wire with a high melting point. Other uses:
★ Its high melting point makes tungsten suitable for aerospace and high temperature uses which include electrical, heating, and welding applications, notably in the
GTAW process (also called
TIG welding).
★ Hardness and density properties make this metal ideal for making
heavy metal alloys that are used in armament,
heat sinks, and high density applications, such as weights, counterweights, ballast keels for yachts and tail ballast for commercial aircraft.
★ The high
density makes it an ideal ingredient for
darts, normally 80% and sometimes up to 97%. This allows darts containing tungsten to have a smaller diameter than those of other metals at the same weight, permitting tighter groupings.
★
High speed steel contains tungsten and some tungsten steels contain as much as 18% tungsten.
★
Superalloys containing tungsten are used in
turbine blades and wear resistant parts and coatings. Examples are
Hastelloy and
Stellite.
★ Tungsten powder is used as a filler material in
plastic composites which are used as a nontoxic substitute for
lead, in
bullets, shot, and radiation shields.
★ Tungsten chemical compounds are used in
catalysts, inorganic pigments, and tungsten disulfide high-temperature
lubricants which are stable to 500 °C (930 °F).
★ Since this element's thermal expansion is similar to
borosilicate glass, it is used for making glass-to-metal seals.
★ It is used in
kinetic energy penetrators, usually alloyed with nickel and iron or cobalt, to form heavy alloys, used as an alternative to
depleted uranium.
★ Tungsten is used as an interconnect material in integrated circuits. Contact holes are etched in silicon dioxide dielectric material, filled with tungsten and polished to form connections to transistors. Typical contact holes can be as small as 65 nm.
★
Tungsten carbide is one of the hardest
carbides and is used in machine tools such as make
milling and
turning tools, and used together with cobalt and carbon is often the best choice for such applications.
★ Used extensively for shielding in the
radiopharmaceutical industry. It is often employed when transporting individual
FDG doses (called 'pigs') - the high energy of
fluorine-18 makes lead much less effective.
★ Tungsten is used in the emitters of
focused ion beam and
electron microscopes.
★ Tungsten is also beginning to be used in jewelry. Its hardness makes it ideal for
rings that will never scratch, are
hypoallergenic and will not need polishing. This property is especially useful in designs with a brushed finish.
★ Also used in fishing lures like the
Mormyshka.
Miscellaneous: Oxides are used in
ceramic glazes and
calcium/
magnesium tungstates are used widely in fluorescent lighting. Crystal tungstates are used as
scintillation detectors in
nuclear physics and
nuclear medicine. The metal is also used in
X-ray targets and heating elements for electrical furnaces. Salts that contain tungsten are used in the chemical and
tanning industries. Tungsten 'bronzes' (so-called due to the colour of the tungsten oxides) along with other compounds are used in
paints. Some types of
strings for musical instruments are wound with tungsten wire.
History
Tungsten (
Swedish ''tung sten'' meaning "heavy stone"), even though the current name for the element in Swedish is ''wolfram'' (sometimes spelled in Swedish as ''volfram''), from the denomination ''volf rahm'' by
Wallerius in 1747, translated from the description by
Agricola in 1546 as ''Lupi spuma'', meaning "wolf's froth" after the way tin is eaten up like a wolf after sheep in the process of its extraction
[1].
It was first hypothesized to exist by
Peter Woulfe in
1779 who examined
wolframite and concluded that it must contain a new substance. In 1781
Carl Wilhelm Scheele ascertained that a new
acid could be made from tungstenite. Scheele and
Torbern Bergman suggested that it could be possible to obtain a new metal by reducing tungstic acid. In
1783 José and
Fausto Elhuyar found an acid in wolframite that was identical to tungstic acid. In
Spain later that year the brothers succeeded in isolating tungsten through reduction of this acid with
charcoal. They are credited with the discovery of the element
[2],
[3]
In World War II, tungsten played an enormous role in background political dealings.
Portugal, as the main European source of the element, was put under pressure from both sides, because of its sources of wolframite ore. The resistance to high temperatures, as well as the extreme strength of its alloys, made the metal into a very important raw material for the weaponry industry.
Biological role
Tungsten is an
essential nutrient for some organisms.
Enzymes called
oxidoreductases use tungsten in a way that is similar to
molybdenum by using it in a tungsten-
pterin complex.
On
August 20,
2002, officials representing the U.S.-based
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced that
urine tests on
leukemia patient families and control group families in the
Fallon, Nevada area had shown elevated levels of the metal tungsten in the bodies of both groups.
[4] Sixteen recent cases of
cancer in children were discovered in the Fallon area which has now been identified as a
cancer cluster, (it should be noted, however, that the majority of the cancer victims are not long time residents of Fallon). Dr. Carol H. Rubin, a branch chief at the CDC, said data demonstrating a link between tungsten and leukemia is not available at present.
[5]
Production trends

Tungsten output in 2005
Tungsten is found in the
minerals
wolframite (
iron-
manganese tungstate, FeW
O4/MnWO
4),
scheelite (
calcium tungstate, CaWO
4),
ferberite and
hübnerite. There are important deposits of these minerals in
China (with about 80% world share),
Russia,
Austria and
Portugal, reports the
British Geological Survey. The metal is commercially produced by reducing tungsten oxide with hydrogen or
carbon.
World tungsten reserves have been estimated at 7 million t W. Unfortunately, most of these reserves are not economically workable so far. At our current annual consumption rate, these reserves will only last for about 140 years. According to further estimates, it has been suggested that 30% of the reserves are Wolframite and 70% are Scheelite ores. Another factor that controls the tungsten supply is scrap recycling of tungsten and it has been proven to be a very valuable raw material in comparison to ore.
Compounds
The most common formal
oxidation state of tungsten is +6, but it exhibits all oxidation states from -1 to +6.
[1] Tungsten typically combines with oxygen to form the yellow
tungstic oxide, WO
3, which dissolves in aqueous alkaline solutions to form tungstate ions, WO
42−.
Aqueous polyoxoanions
Aqueous tungstate solutions are noted for the formation of
polyoxoanions under neutral and acidic conditions. As tungstate is progressively treated with acid, it first yields the soluble, metastable "paratungstate A"
anion, W
7O
246−, which over hours or days converts to the less soluble "paratungstate B" anion, H
2W
12O
4210−. Further acidification produces the very soluble metatungstate anion, H
2W
12O
406−, after equilibrium is reached. The metatungstate ion exists as a symmetric cluster of twelve tungsten-
oxygen octahedra known as the "
Keggin" anion. Many other polyoxoanions exist as
metastable species. The inclusion of a different atom such as phosphorus in place of the two central hydrogens in metatungstate produces a wide variety of the so-called heteropolyanions.
''See also .''
Isotopes
Main articles: isotopes of tungsten
Naturally occurring tungsten consists of five
isotopes whose
half-lives are so long that they can be considered
stable. All can decay into isotopes of element 72 (
hafnium) by
alpha emission;
180W has been observed to have a half life of 1.8 +- 0.2
Ea. The other naturally occurring isotopes have not been observed to decay, constraining their half-lives to be:
182W, T
1/2 > 8.3 Ea;
184W, T
1/2 > 29 Ea;
185W, T
1/2 > 13 Ea;
186W, T
1/2 > 27 Ea.
[2] On average, two alpha decays of
180W occur in one gram of natural tungsten per year.
27 artificial
radioisotopes of tungsten have been characterized, the most stable of which are
181W with a
half-life of 121.2 days,
185W with a half-life of 75.1 days,
188W with a half-life of 69.4 days and
178W with a half-life of 21.6 days. All of the remaining
radioactive isotopes have half-lives of less than 24 hours, and most of these have half-lives that are less than 8 minutes. Tungsten also has 4
meta states, the most stable being
179mW (t
½ 6.4 minutes).
References
★
Los Alamos National Laboratory - Tungsten
★ DC/AC Circuits and Electronics: Principles & Applications by Robert K. Herrick, Published by Delmar Learning 2003 for Purdue University
1. The Elements, , John, Emsley, , 2000,
2. National Nuclear Data Center table of nuclides, http://www.nndc.bnl.gov/chart/
See also
★
Field emission gun
★
Oliver Sacks: ""
External links
★
Tungsten Disulfide Applications WS2
★
WebElements.com – Tungsten
★
Properties, Photos, History, MSDS
★
ScienceLab.com – Tungsten
★
Picture in the collection from Heinrich Pniok
★
Elementymology & Elements Multidict by Peter van der Krogt – Tungsten
★
Detection of the Natural Alpha Decay of Tungsten
★
International Tungsten Industry Association