Element Europium, Eu, Lanthanide

63
Eu
151.96
Europium

[Xe]
6s2
4f7

Europium History

The story of the new rare earth element discovery was in close conjunction with Lecoq de Boisbaudran spectroscopic research. In 1886 Sir William Crookes via spectroscopic analysis described a new line with wavelength 609 nm. The same new line he observed in the spectrum of ytterbium and samarium earths mixture. Crookes had not identified the new element. In 1892 Lecoq de Boisbaudran received from Kleve 3 g of samarium-gadolinium earth and had obtained basic fractions from concentrates having spark spectral lines not accounted for by samarium or gadolinium and thus by new elements, which he named and . Eugene-Anatole Demarcay separated it in 1901 by fractional crystallization of double magnesium nitrates and in 1896 Demarcay had announced a new element between samarium and gadolinium indicated with Σ; in 1900 he showed that this element was identical with . and Crookes lines. In 1901 he succeeded to separate the element and could get it its name. The element is named after the continent Europe - Europium.

Europium Occurrence

Lanthanide Europium crustal abundance is 1.3x10-4 mass %, in seawater 1.1x10-6 mg/L. Along with other rare earth elements it is contained in monazite, bastnasite, loparite, and samarskite as well as, in less amounts, is contained in gadolinite, xenotime, euxenite and apatites.

Europium Neighbours


Chemical Elements