Reactivity Profile
TUNGSTEN is stable at room temperature. Very slowly attacked by nitric acid, sulfuric acid, and aqua regia. Dissolved by a mixture of hydrofluoric acid and nitric acid. No reaction with aqueous bases. Attacked rapidly by motlen alkaline melts such as Na2O2 or KNO3/NaOH. Vigorous reactions with bromine trifluoride and chlorine trifluoride. Becomes incandescent upon heating with lead oxide; becomes incandescent in cold fluorine and with iodine pentafluoride. Combustible in the form of finely divided powder and may ignite spontaneously.
Potential Exposure
Tungsten is used in ferrous and
nonferrous alloys, and for filaments in incandescent lamps.
It has been stated that the principal health hazards from
tungsten and its compounds arise from inhalation of aerosols
during mining and milling operations. The principal
compounds of tungsten to which workers are exposed are
ammonium paratungstate, oxides of tungsten (WO3, W2O5,
WO2); metallic tungsten; and tungsten carbide. In the production
and use of tungsten carbide tools for machining, exposure
to the cobalt used as a binder or cementing substance
may be the most important hazard to the health of the
employees. Since the cemented tungsten carbide industry
uses such other metals as tantalum, titanium, niobium, nickel,
chromium, and vanadium in the manufacturing process, the
occupational exposures are generally to mixed dust.
First aid
If this chemical gets into the eyes, remove any
contact lenses at once and irrigate immediately for at least
15 minutes, occasionally lifting upper and lower lids. Seek
medical attention immediately. If this chemical contacts the
skin, remove contaminated clothing and wash immediately
with soap and water. Seek medical attention immediately.
If this chemical has been inhaled, remove from exposure,
begin rescue breathing (using universal precautions, including
resuscitation mask) if breathing has stopped and CPR if
heart action has stopped. Transfer promptly to a medical
facility. When this chemical has been swallowed, get medical
attention. Give large quantities of water and induce
vomiting. Do not make an unconscious person vomit.
Shipping
UN3089 Metal powders, flammable, n.o.s.,
Hazard Class: 4.1; Labels: 4.1-Flammable solid. UN3189
Metal powder, self heating, n.o.s., Hazard Class: 4.2;
Labels: 4.2-Spontaneously combustible material.
Incompatibilities
Tungsten: The finely divided powder is
combustible and may ignite spontaneously in air.
Incompatible with bromine trifluoride; chlorine trifluoride;
fluorine, iodine pentafluoride.
Description
Tungsten was recognized as a distinct element in 1779 by
Peter Woulfe, but not isolated until 1783, by Jose and Fausto
d’Elhuyar. The average tungsten concentration in the earth’s
crust is ~0.006%. Tungsten occurs naturally as tungstate,
mainly in compounds such as wolframites and scheelites.
Waste Disposal
Recovery of tungsten from
sintered metal carbides, scrap and spent catalysts has been
described as an alternative to disposal.
Isotopes
There are 36 isotopes of tungsten. Five are naturally stable and therefore contributeproportionally to tungsten’s existence on Earth, as follows: W-180 = 0.12%, W-182 = 26.50%, W-183 = 14.31%, W-184 = 30.64%, and W-186 = 28.43%. The other31 isotopes are man-made in nuclear reactors and particle accelerators and have halflivesranging from fractions of a second to many days.
Origin of Name
Tungsten was originally named “Wolfram” by German scientists, after
the mineral in which it was found, Wolframite—thus, its symbol “W.” Later, Swedish scientists
named it tung sten, which means “heavy stone,” but it retained its original symbol
of “W.”
Occurrence
Tungsten is the 58th most abundant element found on Earth. It is never found in 100%pure form in nature. Its major ore is called wolframite or tungsten tetroxide, (Fe,Mn)WO4,which is a mixture of iron and manganese and tungsten oxide. During processing, the ore ispulverized and treated with strong alkalis resulting in tungsten trioxide (WO3), which is thenheated (reduced) with carbon to remove the oxygen. This results in a variety of bright colorchanges and ends up as a rather pure form of tungsten metal: 2WO3 + 3C → 2WO + 3CO2.Or, if hydrogen is used as the reducing agent, a more pure form of metal is produced: WO3+ 3H2 → W + 3H2O.
Tungsten ores (oxides) are found in Russia, China, South America, Thailand, and Canada.In the United States, the ores are found in Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, California, Arizona,and Nebraska.
Characteristics
Tungsten is considered part of the chromium triad of group six (VIB), which consists of24Cr, 42Mo, and 74W. These elements share many of the same physical and chemical attributes.Tungsten’s high melting point makes it unique insofar as it can be heated to the point thatit glows with a very bright white light without melting. This makes it ideal as a filamentfor incandescent electric light bulbs. Most metals melt long before they reach the point ofincandescence.
Chemically, tungsten is rather inert, but it will form compounds with several other elementsat high temperatures (e.g., the halogens, carbon, boron, silicon, nitrogen, and oxygen).Tungsten will corrode in seawater.
Definition
A transition metal
occurring naturally in wolframite
((Fe,Mn)WO4) and scheelite (CaWO4). It
was formerly called wolfram. It is used as
the filaments in electric lamps and in various
alloys.
Symbol: W; m.p. 3410 ± 20°C; b.p.
5650°C; r.d. 19.3 (20°C); p.n. 74; r.a.m.
183.84.
Definition
tungsten: Symbol W. A white orgrey metallic transition element(formerly called wolfram); a.n. 74;r.a.m. 183.85; r.d. 19.3; m.p. 3410°C;b.p. 5660°C. It is found in a numberof ores, including the oxides wolframite,(Fe,Mn)WO4, and scheelite,CaWO4. The ore is heated with concentratedsodium hydroxide solutionto form a soluble tungstate. Theoxide WO3 is precipitated from thisby adding acid, and is reduced to themetal using hydrogen. It is used invarious alloys, especially high-speedsteels (for cutting tools) and in lampfilaments. Tungsten forms a protectiveoxide in air and can be oxidizedat high temperature. It does not dissolvein dilute acids. It forms compoundsin which the oxidation stateranges from +2 to +6. The metal wasfirst isolated by Juan d’Elhuyer andFausto d’Elhuyer (1755–1833) in1783.
Production Methods
Tungsten occurs principally in the minerals wolframite (Fe,Mn)WO4, scheelite (CaWO4), ferberite (FeWO4), and hubnerite (MnWO4). These ores are found in China, Russia, Canada, Austria, Africa, Bolivia, Columbia, and Portugal. Wolframite is the most important oreworldwide; scheelite is the principal domestic U.S. ore. Scheelite, when pure, contains 80.6% WO3, the most common impurity being MoO3. The percentages of FeO and MnO in wolframite vary considerably; hubnerite is the term applied to ore containing more than 20% MnO and ferberite and to ore containing more than 20% FeO. Intermediate samples are called wolframite.
Hazard
Tungsten dust, powder, and fine particles will explode, sometimes spontaneously, in air.The dust of many of tungsten’s compounds is toxic if inhaled or ingested.
Health Hazard
The soluble compounds of
tungsten are distinctly more toxic than the
insoluble forms.
Flammability and Explosibility
Flammable
reaction suitability
core: tungsten
Carcinogenicity
Tungsten has been suspected to be involved in the occurrence of childhood leukemia, with the discovery of a cluster of diseases in Fallon, Nevada, associated with elevated levels of tungsten in urine and drinking water. The exact environmental source of exposure to tungsten was not clearly identi?ed and there is little evidence for an etiological role of tungsten in eliciting leukemia.
Environmental Fate
Tungsten in the environment largely exists as ions in
compounds and primarily insoluble solids. The potential for
particulate matter to spread is low as wet and dry deposition
removes it from the atmosphere. If released to air, most
tungsten compounds have low vapor pressures and are expected
to exist solely in the particulate phase in the ambient
atmosphere. Volatization is not expected to be an important
fate process.
Purification Methods
Clean the solid with conc NaOH solution, rub it with very fine emery paper until its surface is bright, wash it with previously boiled and cooled conductivity water and dry it with filter paper. [Hein & Herzog in Handbook of Preparative Inorganic Chemistry (Ed. Brauer) Academic Press Vol II p 1417 1965.]
Toxicity evaluation
Reported inhalation effects are probably due to cobalt in
exposures, a competitive inhibitor of molybdenum utilization.