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Nickel is element number 28 between Cobalt (27) and Copper (29)
Nickel has been known for a long time as an element or as a mixture with other metals
But it was only isolated as an element in
1751 by Axel Friedrich Cronstedt in Sweden.
To begin with it didn't have really much use and the big breakthrough for Nickel came in the 19th century
when it was discovered that if you added Nickel to Steel
you could make very strong armor.
Particularly armor plates for ships so that
your ship was stronger than the enemies and their shells couldn't penetrate
About the same time, a large deposit of Nickel or Nickel ore
was discovered in Sudbury in Ontario in Canada so that in some ways...
Nickel has become a Canadian element.
There are also now large deposits in Russia
But the Canadians have become so proud of Nickel
Axel Friedrich Cronstedt, his portrait is on the premier medal of the Canadian Institute of Chemistry
It is thought that the nickel deposit in Canada probably came with a meteorite from outer space,
because meteorites quite often have a very high Nickel content
and presumably in the very distant past a massive meteorite struck what is now Canada
and buried itself in the Sudbury region.
You don't need a very large diameter meteorite to contain an awful lot of metal.
The big breakthrough in the refining of Nickel came in 1890
when the British chemist, Ludwig Mond, who was a major industrialist, had a problem in his chemical works
that some of the Nickel valves on his chemical plant were found to corrode - dissolve
And he discovered or his assistant Finker discovered
that this was caused by a reaction between Carbon Monoxide and Nickel.
In 1890 they published a key paper about the compound.
The compound is called Nickel Tetracarbonyl { Ni(Co)4 }
It consists of essential nickel atom surrounded by four Carbon Monoxide groups arranged in a tetrahedron.
What made this compound really unusual is that when you think about transition metals - Iron, Copper, Nickel,
you think of coloured salts which are solids all the time
Nickel Carbonyl was a liquid, it was colorless and it boils at 43° C (107.6° F)
So it was almost a gas at room temperature.
The important thing about Nickel carbonyl
is that you can distill it easily and if you heat it up it decomposes back into nickel and carbon monoxide
So it turned out to be a really good way of purifying Nickel ore
And Mond set up a company specifically to get nickel from the ores in Sudbury.
So he was reacting the ore with carbon monoxide which extracted out the nickel and in fact some of the iron -
both of these so-called carbonyl compounds
You can then separate them by distillation
Heat them up to decompose them and you get absolutely pure nickel and some iron as well.
It was then discovered that nickel was a very good catalyst for reacting organic compounds with hydrogen
And particularly it was discovered that you could hydrogenate vegetable oils, sort of cooking oils that you use.
And these oils have Carbon-Carbon double bonds.
If you react this with hydrogen, the melting point of the oils increases
so the material becomes more like butter
And this is how you make margarine, by reacting vegetable oil with hydrogen and the Nickel is the Catalyst.
The hydrogen is absorbed onto the surface of Nickel the organic compound is also absorbed onto the surface
and when the molecules are held there, the hydrogen can transfer from the nickel onto the carbon of the double bond.
[Music]
I was very keen to do a big experiment demonstration in this video,
and I wanted to do it with a material called Raney Nickel.
Murray Raney was an American chemist working on the hydrogenation of fats trying to make a better catalyst
and the problem with the catalyst is, because it is solid and the molecules are absorbing on the surface
the bigger the surface area within reason, the better the catalyst.
So he needed some way of dividing up the nickel
so it was in very small particles, so it had a very large surface area
And he hit on the idea of mixing molten aluminium and molten nickel - these melted metals
And they mix when they are liquid, but when they solidify they separate
So you end up with a lump of aluminium with tiny bits of Nickel embedded in the solid
rather like currants or cherries in the cake
[Neil opens the can]
You can then put these mixed nickel aluminum pellets into sodium hydroxide
[Music + experiment sounds]
The sodium hydroxide dissolves the aluminium,
rather like we've done before with Coke cans
and they leave the nickel quite untouched
But they come out like removing the cherries from the cake
and they have a very low surface area.
So now my experiment.
I had read that Raney nickel is Pyrophoric, it reacts with oxygen in the air and bursts into flames
So I went to talk to my colleagues in organic chemistry who use Raney nickel
and you buy it as a slurry so it's wet to avoid it bursting into flames.
So I got a bottle which looked a bit old, but I was assured was probably okay
And I persuaded Neil to pour it onto a filter paper
And so what I expected was that it would dry out
and then you would be left with this dried tiny particles of Nickel which would
absorb oxygen, start burning, heat up more and more and burst into spectacular flames
Unfortunately, it didn't. In fact when Neil eventually set fire to the filter paper...
and the nickel didn't seem to burn
Clearly we had a dud batch
I think that the air had got in and slowly dissolved in the water and reacted over a period of months
and oxidized the nickel so probably what we had was some form of nickel oxide
But they are all fairly black in color so you can't really tell what you've got
So I rushed off and found another professor who had a much fresher sample
and he came down with his sample
and he told us we had to dry it on the hot plate
and he got quite worried, thought we'd used rather a lot of nickel.
We heated it up, we had all the cameras
the GoPro, the thermal camera, Brady standing there
so excited, and eventually...
it glowed slightly...
And what this demonstrates, is that sometimes
what chemists tell you about reactions are not always what happens in the lab.
However you've got to imagine
that if you're making margarine on a huge scale...
Tens of thousands of tons, and have got a huge amount of Raney nickel
then probably you can get quite a serious fire.
But we don't have that much Raney nickel, and we don't want a serious fire.
So, well, first of all let's look at some nickel
Neil has produced some Nickel pellets
So these are just labelled as general-purpose nickel
They're lumps of nickel. Quite a few chemists like to use Nickel spatulas
because they are more resistant to strong acids than stainless steel ones.
You can have over here...
This is quite nice. This is a...
Gauze that is made of very fine Nickel wires.
I think this one is designed for Electrochemistry so you can get a very high surface area.
Nickel has also been used quite often for electroplating in the days when cars had shiny bumpers
I can't remember what Americans called bumpers...
Fenders!
And these consisted of steel, which were plated with nickel and on top of the nickel, was chromium.
So the Chromium gave a nice shiny look but the Nickel bonded them together
Nickel has very colorful salts.
and our undergraduates, in their first year do a very nice experiment
where they take Nickel Chloride { NiCl4 } that is green
And they react this with ammonia, so that each nickel atom is surrounded by six ammonia atoms.
The Nickel ammonia complex { [Ni(Nh3)6]2+ } is a nice purple color
They then have to do a separate experiment to measure how much nickel is in the sample
to see if they made it properly.
They do this by dissolving up their nice purple compound
adding an organic compound called dimethyl glyoxime
which binds to the nickel and forms an insoluble red precipitate
which they filter off and weigh, so they can see how much nickel there is in their compound.
So in a single experiment...
they have gone from green to purple to red.
We're not showing you the experiment because then our students might cheat!!
So you'll have to come as a student to do it yourself
Then Neil thought about it.
He realized that as the water was evaporating and the individual particles of nickel got dry
each of them oxidized so you never had the whole mass going off at once
So what he decided
was to put the wet Raney nickel in a vacuum desiccator
This is a vessel which you can pump out all the air
And you're pumping on it of course the water also evaporates but the nickel is dried in a vacuum
so there's no oxygen for it to react with
So when he opened the tap, the air, containing the oxygen rushed in...
And all the nickel reacted at the same time and produced quite a satisfying whoosh
[Brady:] We've made videos about every element on the periodic table.
If you'd like to watch them in order, I'll put a link on the screen and in the video description
There's a playlist of them all one to 118. Might take you a little while...
We're constantly updating these videos with new ones like the nickel video you just watched.
And in fact we've filmed so much about Nickel there's some leftovers.
If you'd like to watch them, I'm also linking to the extra footage.
You can go and check out even more details the professor had to share.