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Lanthanum was discovered
by Carl Gustaf Mosander, a Swedish chemist, in
1839. Mosander was searching for impurities he
believed existed within samples of cerium.
He treated cerium nitrate (Ce(NO3)3)
with dilute nitric acid (HNO3) and
found a new substance he named lanthana (La2O3).
Roughly 0.0018% of the earth's crust is composed
of lanthanum. Today, lanthanum is primarily
obtained through an ion exchange process from
monazite sand ((Ce, La, Th, Nd, Y)PO4),
a material rich in rare earth elements that can
contain as much as 25% lanthanum.
Lanthanum is one of the
rare earth elements used to make carbon
arc lights which are used in the motion picture
industry for studio lighting and projector
lights. Lanthanum also makes up about 25% of
Misch metal, a material that is used to make
flints for lighters. Lanthana (La2O3)
is used to make the glass used in camera lenses
and in other special glasses. |