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cobalt |
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cobaltHard, lustrous, grey, metallic element, atomic number 27, relative atomic mass 58.933. It is found in various ores and occasionally as a free metal, sometimes in metallic meteorite fragments. It is used in the preparation of magnetic, wear-resistant, and high-strength alloys; its compounds are used in inks, paints, and varnishes. The isotope Co-60 is radioactive (half-life 5.3 years) and is produced in large amounts for use as a source of gamma rays in industrial radiography, research, and cancer therapy. Cobalt was named in 1730 by Swedish chemist Georg Brandt (1694–1768); the name derives from the fact that miners considered its ore malevolent because it interfered with copper production. Cobalt
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This demonstrated that the cobaltic sulfide near the surface of the sample had been changed to a cobaltous compound and/or cobaltic hexahydrate, both of which are pink. Cobaltous chloride hexahydrate and ferrous chloride tetrahydrate were purchased from Fluka and used without further purification. In the third, the letter was written with cobaltous chloride solution that was invisible on drying. |
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