Headlines

Super Bowl Uses Gases and Welding
Super Bowl Uses Gases and Welding
From welded steel supports to beverage gas, the industry plays a critical role. ...more | comments

FMCSA Bars Schedule I Drugs
Agency amends physical qualifications for CMV drivers. ...more | comments

Man Commits Oxygen Fraud
Canadian man tells medical oxygen users their supplier went out of business. ...more | comments
More Headlines  |   RSS Feed


Cadmium

From GAWDAwiki

Jump to: navigation, search

Cadmium is a soft, bluish-white metal and is easily cut with a knife. It is similar in many respects to zinc. It is used in silver solder.[1]

Contents

History

Cadmium was discovered by Friedrich Stromeyer in 1817 from an impurity in zinc carbonate. Cadmium most often occurs in small quantities associated with zinc ores, such as sphalerite (ZnS). Greenockite (CdS) is the only mineral of any consequence bearing cadmium. Almost all cadmium is obtained as a by-product in the treatment of zinc, copper, and lead ores. It is a soft, bluish-white metal which is easily cut with a knife. It is similar in many respects to zinc. In 1927 the International Conference on Weights and Measures redefined the meter in terms of the wavelength of the red cadmium spectral line (i.e. 1m = 1.553,164.13 wavelengths). This definition has been changed.

Uses

Cadmium is a component of some of the lowest melting alloys; it is used in bearing alloys with low coefficients of friction and great resistance to fatigue; it is used extensively in electroplating, which accounts for about 60% of its use. It is also used in many types of solder, for standard E.M.F. cells, for Ni-Cd batteries, and as a barrier to control nuclear fission. Cadmium compounds are used in black and white television phosphors and in blue and green phosphors for color TV tubes. It forms a number of salts, of which the sulfate is most common; the sulfide is used as a yellow pigment. Cadmium and solutions of its compounds are toxic.

Handling

Failure to appreciate the toxic properties of cadmium may cause workers to be unwittingly exposed to dangerous fumes. Silver solder, for example, which contains cadmium, should be handled with care. Serious toxicity problems have been found from long-term exposure and work with cadmium plating baths. Exposure to cadmium dust should not exceed 0.01 mg/m3 (8-hour time-weighted average, 40-hour week). The ceiling concentration (maximum), for a period of 15 min, should not exceed 0.14 mg/m3. Cadmium oxide fume exposure (8-hour, 40-hour week) should not exceed 0.05 mg/m3, and the maximum concentration should not exceed 0.05 mg/m3. These values are presently being restudied and recommendations have been made to reduce the exposure.[2]


Reference

  1. http://www.webelements.com/cadmium/
  2. html http://periodic.lanl.gov/elements/48.html