Both contain the useful metal titanium. Titanium can be refined from them profitably.
The ores of magnets consist of various elements and substances. The main components are iron ore, lodestone, magnetite and much more.
It's an ore that doesn't contain a very high proportion of valuable minerals. The term could also be applied to richer ores containing large amounts of undesirable impurities, arsenic for example. Low-grade ores are less valuable than higher-grade ones. Also, recovery rates for low grade ores tend to be lower than for high grade ores - that is, a lower percentage of the total amount of metal in the ore is extracted successfully. The definition of low-grade depends on the resource in question. For copper, low grade ores have less than 1% copper. For gold, an ore having 1% gold by mass would be considered (very) high-grade, as gold is more valuable than copper.
Minerals like uraninite and carnotite are highly radioactive ores of uranium.
NO!!! It does not occur naturally. However, its mineral ores are very common. e.g. Haematite, Magnetite.
Some impurities ,or unwanted substances ,are less dense than water ,so they float in water and can be washed away.Others ,like sulfur ,can be burned away.
yes......however there are better examples of iron ores but ilmenite and rutile ARE iron ores.
ask bob
1.Titanium 2.ilmenite 3.Rutile.
True
The most common titanium ores are rutile and ilmenite. Though there are many more.
The element obtained from ilmenite and rutile is Titanium.
why are manufacturers more likly to obtain titanium from rutile then from ilmenite
Titanium
G. W Elger has written: 'Producing synthetic rutile from ilmenite by pyrometallurgy' -- subject(s): Rutile, Ilmenite
Rutile (TiO2) and ilmenite (FeTiO3).
Titanium is a durable, lightweight, and extremely useful metal derived from minerals like ilmenite and rutile.
Titanium ores (rutile or ilmenite) are mined in Australia, New Zealand, USA, Canada, Ukraine, Mozambique, China, India, Norway, South Africa, etc.