IC 6572 Vanadium

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Frank L. Hess
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
12
File Size:
615 KB
Publication Date:
Apr 1, 1932

Abstract

Vanadium, although widely spread in minute quantities through the crust of the earth, is found in few places sufficiently concentrated to be economically mined and prepared for use. Most rocks carry from a trace to a few hundredths of a per cent of vanadium oxide, and coal ash may carry about as much as the rocks, Much of the "coal" quoted in the literature as carrying vanadium has been asphaltite, and in other ccal the vanadium is of late introduction. The ash of the petroleums, though usually present in very small quantity, may carry a large percentage of vanadiun, so that production of vanadium from it has been seriously considered. Naturally the ashes of soze asphaltites similarly carry vanadium.' The great deposit at Minasragra, Peru, to which further reference will be made, is probably an altered asphaltite. Ilmenite and cther iron minerals usually carry vanadium 10 and some has been saved from the minette ores of France. 11 Many veins that carry lead copper and zinc minerals also carry a little vanadium, which, especially if the veins are in a comparatively dry region, such as the southwestern United States, northern Mexico, Northern Rhodesia, Southwest Africa, or Spain, collects in the oxidized parts of the veins as vanadinite,
Citation

APA: Frank L. Hess  (1932)  IC 6572 Vanadium

MLA: Frank L. Hess IC 6572 Vanadium. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1932.

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