Tungsten - The MOST REFRACTORY Metal ON EARTH!

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So, today I will tell you about the top refractory metal on Earth – tungsten. Tungsten is one of the transition metals, and is located in group 6 of the periodic table of chemical elements.
It got it’s name from the mineral wolframite, from which this mineral is obtained. Also, a tiny fun fact, wolfram is a Swedish word.
Now if we look at the appearance, tungsten looks like a shiny metal with gray tint, though if you hold a rod of tungsten in the hand you may experience one special characteristic. The density of tungsten is almost 20 grams per cubic centimeter, which is very close to the density of gold.
That is the reason why tungsten was used for faking gold bars. A couple of years ago there was news that some gold bars had a filling of tungsten inside, which of course is significantly cheaper than gold.
Though the forgery causes skepticism among some scientists.
To clearly demonstrate to you how much is 20 gram per cubic centimeter, I will compare the mass of a rod of tungsten and a rod of magnesium.
As you can see, the tungsten rod is not only several times smaller than the magnesium one, but is also even heavier than the latter.
Also, tungsten is a fairly brittle metal, it is plastic only when it has a very high purity. In addition, tungsten has the highest tensile strength.
However, this is not the main feature of this metal. To melt a piece of tungsten, you need to reach an extremely high temperature of 3422 degrees Celsius.
That is why this metal was at first used as the filament in incandescent bulbs.
However, if you pass a current through the thin tungsten filament, it can overheat and then break, thereby ceasing any production of light .
All is due to the fact that in air tungsten oxidizes at a high temperature, forming on its surface oxides of tungsten.
Also, the tungsten rod after calcination with a gas burner obtains beautiful colored stains, caused by the different thickness of the oxide film on the metal surface.
However, in light bulbs it’s not really about the beauty, more about the ability to actually produce light, hence all the oxygen from the bulb is pumped out and is replaced with a mixture of nitrogen and argon under reduced pressure.
In these circumstances, the filament can shine for quite a long time. Also another fun fact, when taking pictures of the the filament in macro I’ve noticed the difference of the more powerful old light bulbs and the less powerful modern ones.
In the old light bulbs the filament is made simply in the form of a spiral, but it turns out the modern ones have a double helix, making the filament thinner, which creates more sections of uneven thickness in the yarn, which then leads to the more rapid failure of the bulb. From a chemical point of view, tungsten is fairly stable, it is not soluble in hydrochloric or sulphuric acids. And the most stable compounds of hexavalent tungsten, such as, for example, the sodium tungstate are used as a catalyst of epoxidation in the organic synthesis, andin manufacturing of pigments. Sodium tungstate is soluble in water, but instead of water I will use the 30% acetic acid to obtain the so-called tungsten blue pigment that has a very intense color.
To do this, we’ll add a piece of magnesium to the test-tube. Magnesium reacts with acetic acid, releasing hydrogen, which in turn recovers tungsten from the hexavalent state to tungsten oxide 3 with an admixture of other oxides.
The formed particles of oxides are of a small size, allowing them to form colloidal solution of a bright blue or blue-green color.
The shade depends mainly on the acidity of the environment.
The obtained tungsten blue can be used as a good dye for fabric, paper or other items that have the ability to adsorb particles of tungsten blue.
The metal tungsten has a very high hardness and is hardly turned on the grinding wheel. Today tungsten finds many applications.
First and foremost, this metal is used in filaments for the halogen lamps, refractory electrodes for argon-arc welding, as well as in hard projectile cores in some military shells. The most common substance of the tungsten compounds is tungsten carbide, which also goes by the name Pobedit but mainly in Russia (which if you translate that to English means “will win”). It is mostly used as a cutter when machining metals or stones because of its high hardness. Quality high hardness steel would almost always be composed of tungsten. So that’s what this metal tungsten is like, which is found in practically every house and has the most interesting and unique properties.
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I'm a clinical engineer. Tungsten is the anode in just about every xray tube you've encountered. Minus Mammo tubes, those can be one of 4 different types, iirc. Rhodium being most used. Slap tungsten with 10s of thousands of volts and it emits radiation. Any material emits photons when energy is applied to it but Tungsten is EXTREMELY resilient and also produces very good emissions in the xray or gamma spectrum.

Josh-oeex
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Great video. Something important that you missed is that tungsten is used on the tips of nearly all ballpoint pens.

AgnostosGnostos
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"So this is the greatest metal on earth that cant melt"
-Me after Dr.stone

muhamadaditya
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Wolfram is not a Swedish Word. Tungsten on the other hand is, it means heavy rock (stone). Wolfram is german for Wolfs froth (froth like drool)

Thingsthatgopew
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Tungsten also used in the manufacture of X-ray tubes, for both the anode and cathode side. The cathode side is generally one or two filaments much like a light bulb. While the anode on the more power x-ray tubes is shaped like a cone with the tip cut off and is mounted to a motor to spin. Even though tungsten is one of the hardest metals known to man the energy of the electrons passing from the cathode to the anode pits the anode causing failures, which is why the larger x-ray tubes have a motor so the electrons don't hit the same place on the anode prolonging the life of the x-ray tube. Another fact, the x-ray tubes have 20KiloVolts (KV) to 150KV. For the electricians out there, if set to max KV and you measure across the tube you get 150KV however if you went from cathode to ground and again from anode to ground you'd only measure +/- 75KV. Because most electronics will put a negative voltage on the cathode and a positive voltage and the anode giving you the total KV.

mrow
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I came here straight from Doctor stone episode 21

monkeydluffy
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Minor correction: Modern Tungsten filaments are wound in a supercoil (a coil made of coiled wire), not a double helix. DNA has both of those properties, it's a supercoiled string whose chemical structure is a double helix.

Teth
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Dr stone gets to tungsten
Everyone starts watching tungsten videos😁

afs
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Tungsten in Swedish is





*heavy rock/stone*

ramo
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Great video as always. I enjoy how like many of the other transition metals, tungsten changes colors depending on the thickness of oxide.

AMProductions
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Because of your accent, i actually find myself paying closer attention and learning more than i would have. Love it

sanazbani
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Tungsten rods are often used in high quality firearms as the recoil spring's guide rod. The added weight up front is a very effective recoil dampener.

ScottAT
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The quality of these videos is amazing! So glad I found your channel! Keep up the great work.

highacs
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Love your videos, subscribed. You’re accent also makes the videos more fun to watch

nicholasc
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Just to clarify; Tungsten comes from Swedish and means "heavy rock". However, in Swedish it is called Volfram. Strange isn't it?

rasmusn.e.m
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I enjoy learning new things from you. Keep things coming.

salamdamai
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1) My wife and I really love your videos! Thank you for putting in the time, resources and effort to create them and even more so for sharing them with the rest of us!

2) My wife and I would enjoy your videos more if you could make the volume more consistent, namely the outro music.

I have a disease called Complex Regional Pain Syndrome/Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (CRPS/RSD), per the McGill pain scale it's the most painful chronic disease one can get¹. This is _only_ relevant because I'm extremely sensitive to sounds, especially sudden changes in volume or really anything that causes my adrenaline to spike.


¹ As there is no tone nor body language via text) To be clear: this is *_NOT_* a cry for sympathy, an attempt to manipulate or anything other than me explaining why I'm making such a request.

I've had this disease for 16years or so now and while it's not pleasant, I have adjusted and learned to get by.

Also, please understand that in my world, talking about pain is a lot like talking about how I slept last night - just a normal, everyday part of life so I hope you will be able to see it in that way too =)

Finally:
*Please note:* You are under *zero* obligation to give a shit about my opinion and/or preferences! This is your channel and should be ran as you'd like it to be. I am *_only_* expressing _my_ opinion, which may very well differ from the overall average of opinions of your viewers as a whole.

I hope you will take my opinion into consideration only to the extent you would any of your viewers and that it will only carry the weight equivalent to my views - in otherwords, my wife and I are only 1/N (avg number of viewers per video, as we watch together) so do what is best for you =)

Sorry so long! I suck at concise! Thanks again for doing what you do!

LadyD
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Best way to learn all properties of periodic elements- to watch ur videos.😀

harshita
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Wolfram is the GERMAN word. TUNGSTEN is the Swedish word.

Skynyn
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It's mainly used as an electrode for TIG welding (Tungsten Inert Gas). This is due to the high strength of the material and the excellent heat resistance. Old X-ray tubes had a tungsten electrode in them (kind of a flat disc angled at 45 degree).

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