Hafnium

Element with the atomic number of 72
trends
NovemberDecember2025FebruaryMarchApril0500
alias
Hf
element 72
72Hf
mass
178.486 ± 0.006 dalton
chemical formula
Hf
atomic number
72
electronegativity
1
density
13 ± 0.01 gram per cubic centimetre
temperature
20 ± 1 degree Celsius
melting point
4,041 ± 1 degree Fahrenheit
boiling point
8,316 ± 1 degree Fahrenheit
pressure
760 ± 1 torr
vapor pressure
0 [-1 - 1] millimeter of mercury
temperature
68 ± 1 degree Fahrenheit
IDLH
50 ± 10 milligram per cubic meter
time-weighted average exposure limit
0.5 ± 0.1 milligram per cubic meter
applies to jurisdiction
duration
10 ± 1 hour
media
Dewey Decimal Classification
546.514
canonical SMILES
[Hf]
NIOSH Pocket Guide ID
0309
Unicode character
Unicode hex codepoint
927F
Commons category
Hafnium
Commons gallery
Wikimedia Commons URL
time of discovery or invention
1922
Wikipedia creation date
5/17/2001
Wikipedia incoming links count
Wikipedia opening text
Hafnium is a chemical element with the symbol Hf and atomic number 72. A lustrous, silvery gray, tetravalent transition metal, hafnium chemically resembles zirconium and is found in many zirconium minerals. Its existence was predicted by Dmitri Mendeleev in 1869, though it was not identified until 1923, by Coster and Hevesy, making it the last stable element to be discovered. Hafnium is named after Hafnia, the Latin name for Copenhagen, where it was discovered. Hafnium is used in filaments and electrodes. Some semiconductor fabrication processes use its oxide for integrated circuits at 45 nm and smaller feature lengths. Some superalloys used for special applications contain hafnium in combination with niobium, titanium, or tungsten. Hafnium's large neutron capture cross section makes it a good material for neutron absorption in control rods in nuclear power plants, but at the same time requires that it be removed from the neutron-transparent corrosion-resistant zirconium alloys used in nuclear reactors.
Wikipedia redirect
Element 72
Celtium
Jargonium
Norwegium
Norium
Halfnium
Hf (element)
Wikipedia URL
Australian Educational Vocabulary ID
CAS Registry Number
ChEBI ID
ChemSpider ID
EC number
231-166-4
ECHA InfoCard ID
Elhuyar ZTH ID
Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID
Encyclopædia Universalis ID
Freebase ID
GND ID
Great Russian Encyclopedia Online ID
Human Metabolome Database ID
InChI
InChIKey
JSTOR topic ID
Library of Congress authority ID
MeSH descriptor ID
National Diet Library Auth ID
OmegaWiki Defined Meaning
PSH ID
PubChem CID
Quora topic ID
RTECS number
MG4600000
RxNorm ID
Store norske leksikon ID
mapping relation type
Treccani ID
UNII
ZVG number
external links