Element Gadolinium, Gd, Lanthanide

64
Gd
157.25
Gadolinium

[Xe]
6s2
4f7
5d1

Gadolinium History

In 1794 Johan Gadolin the professor of chemistry at the Royal Academy of Abo, received a sample of mineral found in a quarry in the Swedish village Ytterby near Stockholm, by careful experiments, he isolated a rare earth oxide. Several years later Ekeberg found beryllium in it and called it yttria. Mosander splitting old yttria into three new earths, yttria proper, erbia, and iterbia. Mosander's erbia was confirmed by Marc Delafontaine in 1878 and renamed terbia; Delafontaine's terbia was split by Jean de Marignac in 1880 into an earth to which he gave the provisial name and true terbia.

In 1879 Francois Lecoq de Boisbaudran produced a more pure form of the earth Yα. After a correspondence with Marignac Lecoq de Boisbaudran announced that Marignac had chosen to give Yα the name gadolinia (the oxide of gadolinium), after the mineral gadolinite. Gadolinite is named after Johan Gadolin. Pure gadolinium was extracted in 1896.

Gadolinium Occurrence

Lanthanide Gadolinium crustal abundance is 5.4x10-4 mass %, in seawater 6x10-7 mg/L. Along with other rare earth elements it is contained in monazite, bastnasite, in gadolinite, xenotime and apatites.

Gadolinium Neighbours


Periodic Table of Chemical Elements