In 1732, Georg Brandt, a Swedish chemist, discovered cobalt. He was attempting to prove that the ability of certain minerals to color glass blue was due to an unknown element, and not to bismuth, as was commonly believed at the time.
Two Canadian teams contributed to the invention of the Cobalt Bomb- Harold Johns', in Saskatchewan, and Roy Errington's of Elderado Mining and Refining Ltd.
Nobody. Cobalt is an element and has been in existence since the early history of the universe
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Cobalt (I) chloride = Cobalt monochloride = CoCl Cobalt (II) chloride = Cobalt dichloride = CoCl2 Cobalt (III) chloride = Cobalt trichloride = CoCl3
Cobalt is generally bivalent or trivalent. So either Cobalt (II) or Cobalt (III).
Cobalt Chloride, Cobalt Nitrate
Cobalt !
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I do not know his first name who invented revolver? That was Cobalt
Cobalt is an element, and as such was not 'invented'. Cobalt has been found in artifacts from the Chinese and Egyptian cultures dating back to around 1000BCE (Before Common Era - like BC but without the religious context). It was named as an element by Georg Brandt in 1739.
Cobalt is not found as a native metal but generally found in the form of ores. Cobalt is usually not mined alone, and tends to be produced as a by-product of nickel and copper mining activities. The main ores of cobalt are cobaltite, erythrite, glaucodot, and skutterudite. Swedish chemist George Brandt (1694-1768) is credited with isolating cobalt circa 1735. He was able to show that cobalt was the source of the blue color in glass, which previously had been attributed to the bismuth found with cobalt. http://periodic.lanl.gov/elements/27.html
Yes, cobalt form many chemical compounds as cobalt nitrate, cobalt chloride, cobalt sulfate, cobalt sulfide, etc.
Yes, cobalt form many chemical compounds as cobalt nitrate, cobalt chloride, cobalt sulfate, cobalt sulfide, etc.
There are no compounds in Cobalt. It is completely impossible, because Cobalt is an element, and compounds are made up of elements. If this is what you meant to ask, then there a a lot of compounds with Cobalt in them. One example is Cobalt (III) Fluoride, chemical formula CoF3. Any compound with a "Co" (the "C" must be capitalized and the "o" must lowercase) in it contains Cobalt.
cobalt = Cobalt/Kobalt
Cobalt (I) chloride = Cobalt monochloride = CoCl Cobalt (II) chloride = Cobalt dichloride = CoCl2 Cobalt (III) chloride = Cobalt trichloride = CoCl3
Cobalt is generally bivalent or trivalent. So either Cobalt (II) or Cobalt (III).
Cobalt Chloride, Cobalt Nitrate