RI 5898 Field Test For Columbium - Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
T. N. McVay
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
13
File Size:
2490 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines has developed a field test for detecting the presence of columbium in a variety of minerals containing the clement. The test consists of fusing the mineral or rock powder with potassium pyrosulfate in a porcelain crucible, digesting the melt with hot dilute hydrochloric acid to release the columbium oxide (Cb205), and subsequently reducing the columbium oxide to a lower oxide by adding tin, which gives a blue color to the contents of the crucible. The method will detect 1 percent of contained columbium oxide (Cb205) in a mineral sample provided no tungsten is present. If a mineral containing appreciable titanium is test,-!d in the same manner, the solution in the crucible becomes violet. In the presence of columbium, titanium at first causes a violet coloration of the solution, which after a few minutes is masked by the stronger blue of the reduced columbium oxide. Although tantalum oxide (Ta205) does not interfere with the columbium test, tungsten gives a blue color that is indistinguishable from the color obtained with columbium. A simple method is available to detect the presence of columbium in the absence of tungsten, but when the presence of tungsten is suspected, the sample must be subjected to somewhat more elaborate chemical tests to determine the presence or absence of columbium. Although these latter tests can be made in the field, several steps are involved that arc best performed in the laboratory with simple equipment.
Citation

APA: T. N. McVay  (1962)  RI 5898 Field Test For Columbium - Summary

MLA: T. N. McVay RI 5898 Field Test For Columbium - Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1962.

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