(Press-News.org) Contact information: Michael Bernstein
m_bernstein@acs.org
202-872-6042
American Chemical Society
Toward lowering titanium's cost and environmental footprint for lightweight products
A novel method for extracting titanium, a metal highly valued for its light weight, high strength, corrosion resistance and biocompatibility, could lower its cost and make it more widely accessible, for example, for producing lighter car parts to improve fuel efficiency. The method, which significantly reduces the energy required to separate it from its tightly bound companion, oxygen, appears in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
Zhigang Zak Fang and colleagues note that while titanium is the fourth most common metal in the Earth's crust, the high-energy, high-cost method used to extract it prevents its use in broader applications. The metal's light weight, strength, stability and corrosion resistance earned it valued roles on the Mars Odyssey mission, in wedding rings and in deep-sea submersibles. Titanium also could be used to significantly lighten and strengthen commercial products and materials. But currently, titanium is too expensive for widespread use. The most common technique, called the Kroll process, used to extract the metal from titanium oxide was invented in the 1930s and has undergone slight improvements. But by and large, the method, which requires temperatures over 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit, keeps prices for the metal high. Fang's team decided to try out a new approach to make titanium more accessible.
The scientists discovered that they could eliminate the energy-intensive steps of the Kroll process. In the lab, they successfully tested a new series of reactions for isolating titanium that halves the temperature requirements of the conventional method and consumes 60 percent less energy.
###
The authors acknowledge funding from the U.S. Department of Energy.
The American Chemical Society is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress. With more than 163,000 members, ACS is the world's largest scientific society and a global leader in providing access to chemistry-related research through its multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals and scientific conferences. Its main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.
To automatically receive news releases from the American Chemical Society, contact newsroom@acs.org.
Follow us: Twitter Facebook END
Toward lowering titanium's cost and environmental footprint for lightweight products
2013-12-18
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
44 percent of adults worry e-cigarettes will encourage kids to start smoking tobacco
2013-12-18
44 percent of adults worry e-cigarettes will encourage kids to start smoking tobacco
Almost half of parents concerned their child will try e-cigarettes; support high for prohibiting sale to kids, says U-M National Poll on Children's Health
ANN ARBOR, Mich. ...
Suggested ban on trans fat begs the question: Are substitutes any healthier?
2013-12-18
Suggested ban on trans fat begs the question: Are substitutes any healthier?
Health advocates cheered last month's U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) proposal to ban partially hydrogenated oils — which contain trans fats that increase the risk of heart ...
Toward lowering titanium's cost and environment
2013-12-18
Toward lowering titanium's cost and environment
In the quest to shrink motors so they can maneuver in tiny spaces like inside and between human cells, scientists have taken inspiration from millions of years of plant evolution and incorporated, for the first ...
Leading health care executives optimistic about health care reform, Penn survey shows
2013-12-18
Leading health care executives optimistic about health care reform, Penn survey shows
Views differ sharply from general public, politicians, and commentators
Philadelphia - Nearly two-thirds (65 percent) of the nation's leading health ...
Liver cells benefit from mesenchymal stem cell co-culture prior to transplantation
2013-12-18
Liver cells benefit from mesenchymal stem cell co-culture prior to transplantation
Putnam Valley, NY. (Dec. 18, 2013) – Hepatocyte (liver cell) transplantation is becoming an accepted therapy for acute liver failure, either for ...
Preferable treatment for MS found in allogenic bone marrow stem cells
2013-12-18
Preferable treatment for MS found in allogenic bone marrow stem cells
MSCs isolated from MS patients have decreased suppressive function compared to those of healthy counterparts
Putnam Valley, NY. (Dec. 18, 2013) – Multiple sclerosis ...
New actors in the Arctic ecosystem
2013-12-18
New actors in the Arctic ecosystem
Atlantic amphipods are now reproducing in Arctic waters
Biologists from the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) have for the first time ...
'Macrocells' influence corrosion rate of submerged marine concrete structures
2013-12-18
'Macrocells' influence corrosion rate of submerged marine concrete structures
Using numerical modeling, an Italian research team has discovered the role 'macrocells' play in the corrosion of hollow submerged marine concrete structures such as tunnels and parking structures.
In ...
Oil- and metal-munching microbes dominate deep sandstone formations
2013-12-18
Oil- and metal-munching microbes dominate deep sandstone formations
Findings useful to hydrocarbon extraction and carbon sequestration efforts
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Halomonas are a hardy breed of bacteria. They can withstand heat, high salinity, low oxygen, ...
Scientists reduce protein crystal damage, improve pharmaceutical development
2013-12-18
Scientists reduce protein crystal damage, improve pharmaceutical development
'Submicrometer line focusing' identified as standard for crystallophhy
New recommendations for using X-rays promise to speed investigations aimed at understanding the structure and function ...