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Tellurium - Notable characteristics |  | Tellurium - Notable characteristics: Encyclopedia II - Tellurium - Notable characteristics |  | Tellurium is a relatively rare element, in the same chemical family as oxygen, sulfur, selenium, and polonium (the chalcogens).
When crystalline, tellurium is silvery-white and when it is in its pure state it has a metallic luster. This is a brittle and easily pulverized metalloid. Amorphous tellurium is found by precipitating it from a solution of tellurous or telluric acid (Te(OH)6). However, there is some debate whether this form is really amorphous or made of minute crystals. Tellurium is a p-type semiconductor that shows a greater conductivity in ...
See also:Tellurium, Tellurium - Notable characteristics, Tellurium - Applications, Tellurium - History, Tellurium - Occurrence, Tellurium - Compounds, Tellurium - Isotopes, Tellurium - Precautions |  | | Tellurium, Tellurium - Applications, Tellurium - Compounds, Tellurium - History, Tellurium - Isotopes, Tellurium - Notable characteristics, Tellurium - Occurrence, Tellurium - Precautions |  | |
|  |  | Tellurium: Encyclopedia II - Tellurium - Notable characteristics
Tellurium - Notable characteristics
Tellurium is a relatively rare element, in the same chemical family as oxygen, sulfur, selenium, and polonium (the chalcogens).
When crystalline, tellurium is silvery-white and when it is in its pure state it has a metallic luster. This is a brittle and easily pulverized metalloid. Amorphous tellurium is found by precipitating it from a solution of tellurous or telluric acid (Te(OH)6). However, there is some debate whether this form is really amorphous or made of minute crystals. Tellurium is a p-type semiconductor that shows a greater conductivity in certain directions which depends on atomic alignment.
Chemically related to selenium and sulfur, the conductivity of this element increases slightly when exposed to light. It can be doped with copper, gold, silver, tin, or other metals. Tellurium has a greenish-blue flame when burned in normal air and forms tellurium dioxide as a result. When in its molten state, tellurium is corrosive to copper, iron, and stainless steel.
Other related archives1782, 1798, 1960s, 2000, Bismuth, Cadmium zinc telluride, Canada, CdZnTe, Franz-Joseph Müller von Reichenstein, Gold, Japan, Latin, Martin Heinrich Klaproth, Peru, Telluric acid, Telluride, Colorado, Transylvania, US$, acid, alloys, anode, antioxidant, atomic, atomic masses, atomic number, blast furnace, blasting caps, cadmium, calaverite, cast iron, ceramics, chalcogenide glasses, chalcogens, chemical element, copper, crystalline, garlic, gold, infrared, iron, lead, mercury, mercury cadmium telluride, metalloid, oxygen, periodic table, polonium, selenium, semiconductor, silver, solar panels, stainless steel, steel, sulfur, sulfuric acid, tellurates, telluride, tellurium dioxide, thermoelectric, tin, toxic, x-ray, zinc
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Notable characteristics", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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