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vanadium

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vanadium

Silver-white, malleable and ductile, metallic element, atomic number 23, relative atomic mass 50.942. It occurs in certain iron, lead, and uranium ores and is widely distributed in small quantities in igneous and sedimentary rocks. It is used to make steel alloys, to which it adds tensile strength.

Spanish mineralogist Andrés del Rio (1764–1849) and Swedish chemist Nils Sefström (1787–1845) discovered vanadium independently, the former in 1801 and the latter in 1831. Del Rio named it ‘erythronium’, but was persuaded by other chemists that he had not in fact discovered a new element; Sefström gave it its present name, after the Norse goddess of love and beauty, Vanadis (or Freya).



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The drug is based on vanadium and allaxin, a compound found in garlic.
Vanadium is a curious trace element and somewhat difficult to write about It is a little known trace mineral which seems to be required by the body in relatively tiny amounts, and it is not even clear that it is absolutely necessary at all Vanadium is a curious trace element and somewhat difficult to write about.
It integrates vanadium oxide thermal imaging, available in either 640 x 480 or 320 x 240 resolution.
 
 
 
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