Almost certainly by electrolysis of molten lithium chloride.
Lithium is rarely found in its pure state in nature. It is usually found in compounds, such as lithium carbonate and lithium chloride, in minerals like spodumene and lepidolite. However, pure lithium can be extracted from these compounds through various chemical processes.
Lithium is extracted as the molten metal by a process of electrolysis.
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It's produced commercially by electrolysis of lithium-containing minerals. If you wanted to just buy it in small quantities, your best bet would be a chemical supply firm like Fisher or Sigma-Aldrich.
Elemental lithium is NOT a natural resource. Lithium is found as an ion in a combined state, such as lithium carbonate. The reason why lithium is not found naturally is because it is too reactive a metal.
No Lithium is an alkali metal, not a silicate, though it is commercially important.
It is natural. It appears in soil, the ground, and in rocks and crystals such as petalite ore.
Pure lithium is naturally produced by the process of fusion in our stars, including our sun.
Yes, rubidium is a pure element found in nature. It is an alkali metal and is the 16th most abundant element in the Earth's crust. Rubidium is most commonly obtained as a byproduct of lithium production or extracted from certain minerals.
no.
Lithium is a very common material found in desert countries, particularly in salt pans. Electrolytically refined using a mix of potassium chloride and lithium chloride. The pure metal is highly reactive, and must be stored under oil.
Lithium is an element. As such, it has no other substance in it, it is pure lithium. If you wished to analyse it further, you would have to break it down into subatomic particles.