Ytterbium oxide is any oxide of ytterbium, but especially the colourless solid Yb2O3.
Ytterbium itself is a soft silvery-white metal. When exposed to air, it can develop a grayish oxide coating.
ytterbium man made
The atomic mass of ytterbium is approximately 173.04 amu (atomic mass units).
Ytterbium, with the chemical symbol Yb, is the chemical element with the atomic number 70.
Ytterbium is a naturally occuring rare earth element. However, an isotope of Ytterbium (Ytterbium-169) is an artificially produced isotope.
yb2
The chemical formula for ytterbium(III) oxide is Yb2O3.
Ytterbium itself is a soft silvery-white metal. When exposed to air, it can develop a grayish oxide coating.
ytterbium man made
Ytterbium was discovered by Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac in 1878. He heated erbium nitrate until it decomposed and then extracted the residue, which contained an unknown white powder that he named ytterbium oxide. The pure metal was not produced until 1953. The element is named after Ytterby, a village in Sweden. Four elements are named after this town, the others being yttrium, terbium, and erbium.
The atomic mass of ytterbium is approximately 173.04 amu (atomic mass units).
Ytterbium chloride has the chemical formula YbCl3.
Ytterbium is reactive (the Pauling scale index is 1,1).
Ytterbium's average atomic mass is 173.04.
Ytterbium, with the chemical symbol Yb, is the chemical element with the atomic number 70.
Ytterbium is a solid at room temperature and pressure, making its normal phase solid.
Ytterbium is a naturally occuring rare earth element. However, an isotope of Ytterbium (Ytterbium-169) is an artificially produced isotope.