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Ytterbium - History |  | Ytterbium - History: Encyclopedia II - Ytterbium - History |  | Ytterbium was discovered by the Swiss chemist Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac in 1878. Marignac found a new component in the earth then known as erbia and named it ytterbia (after Ytterby, the Swedish town where he found the new erbia component). He suspected that ytterbia was a compound of a new element he called ytterbium (which was in fact the first rare earth to be discovered).
In 1907, the French chemist Georges Urbain separated Marignac's ytterbia into two components, neoytterbia and lutecia. Neoytterbia would later become kn ...
See also:Ytterbium, Ytterbium - Notable characteristics, Ytterbium - Applications, Ytterbium - History, Ytterbium - Occurrence, Ytterbium - Isotopes, Ytterbium - Precautions |  | | Ytterbium, Ytterbium - Applications, Ytterbium - History, Ytterbium - Isotopes, Ytterbium - Notable characteristics, Ytterbium - Occurrence, Ytterbium - Precautions |  | |
|  |  | Ytterbium: Encyclopedia II - Ytterbium - History
Ytterbium - History
Ytterbium was discovered by the Swiss chemist Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac in 1878. Marignac found a new component in the earth then known as erbia and named it ytterbia (after Ytterby, the Swedish town where he found the new erbia component). He suspected that ytterbia was a compound of a new element he called ytterbium (which was in fact the first rare earth to be discovered).
In 1907, the French chemist Georges Urbain separated Marignac's ytterbia into two components, neoytterbia and lutecia. Neoytterbia would later become known as the element ytterbium and lutecia would later be known as the element lutetium. Auer von Welsbach independently isolated these elements from ytterbia at about the same time but called them aldebaranium and cassiopeium.
The chemical and physical properties of ytterbium could not be determined until 1953 when the first nearly pure ytterbium was produced.
Other related archives1878, 1907, 1953, 20th century, Auer von Welsbach, Bose-Einstein statistics, C, Fermi-Dirac statistics, Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac, X-ray, Ytterby, active laser media, allotropes, alloys, atm, atomic number, atomic weight, beta emission, chemical element, compounds, crystal structure, decay mode, decay products, dentistry, discovered, ductile, electrical conductivity, electrical resistance, electricity, electron capture, euxenite, explosion, eye, fire, gadolinite, half-life, ion-exchange, ions, isotope, isotopes, lanthanide series, luster, lutetium, malleable, meta states, metallic, mineral acids, minerals, monazite, natural abundance, oxidizes, periodic table, quantum optics, radiation, radioactive, radioisotopes, rare earth, reacts, semiconductor, skin, solvent extraction, stainless steel, steels, teratogenic, thulium, toxic, u, water, xenotime, yttrium
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "History", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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