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A History of Platinum and its Allied Metals by Donald McDonald & Leslie B. Hunt

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Early Occurrences

Although the modern history of platinum only begins in the 18th century, platinum has been found in objects dating from 700 BC, in particular the famous Casket of Thebes. This little box is decorated with hieroglyphics in gold, silver and an alloy of the platinum group metals.

For the Spanish Conquistadors of the 16th century, platinum was a nuisance. While panning for gold in New Granada they were puzzled by some white metal nuggets which were mixed with the nuggets of gold and which were difficult to separate. The Spanish called this metal Platina, a diminutive of Plata, the Spanish word for silver. Some thought that the platinum was a sort of unripe gold, so that for many years it had no value except as a means of counterfeiting.

 

 

Scientific Developments

 

In the 18th century platinum was a tough challenge to European scientists trying to understand and use the metal. Their difficulties came from the very properties which make platinum suitable for so many applications, such as its high melting point and its great resistance to corrosion. The problems were compounded by the other metals of the platinum group, which were present in raw platinum in varying quantities.

In 1751, a Swedish researcher named Sheffer succeeded in melting platinum by adding arsenic to it. He also recognised platinum as a new element. In 1782, Lavoisier achieved the first true melting of platinum using oxygen, which had recently been discovered; even so, it was another 25 years before commercial quantities of platinum could be produced by this method. During this period, platinum was used for the decoration of porcelain as well as for making laboratory ware and ornaments.

 

 

In the 19th century scientific and technological progress gathered pace. During 1802, Wollaston and Tennant developed refining of platinum and discovered palladium, followed in 1804 by rhodium, iridium and osmium. Meanwhile Wollaston perfected a method of producing malleable platinum. Grove studied the catalytic properties of platinum and in 1842 devised the very first fuel cell using platinum electrodes.

In England, Percival Norton Johnson began work on refining the platinum group metals. He took as his apprentice in 1838 George Matthey, and this collaboration gave birth to the partnership of Johnson and Matthey in 1851. The two men perfected the techniques of separation and refining of platinum group metals and the melting and casting of pure and homogeneous ingots. Matthey went on to create the standard metre in platinum and iridium, at the request of the French Academy of Science, in 1879.
 

 

 

Growth in Supplies

 

Until 1820 Colombia was the only known source of platinum. As production began to decline, deposits were by chance discovered in the Ural mountains of Russia. These became the principal source of platinum for the next 100 years.

In Canada in 1888, platinum was discovered in the nickel-copper ores of Ontario. Between the end of the First World War and the 1950s, Canada was the world’s major source of supply. In 1924 a farmer in the Transvaal province of South Africa discovered several nuggets of platinum in a riverbed. Following this up, the geologist Hans Merensky discovered two deposits each of around 100 kilometres in length. These became known as the Bushveld Igneous Complex and its mines today provide three quarters of the world’s platinum output.

 

 

The Last 50 Years

Platinum mine production has grown continuously since the Second World War in response to the development of new applications. One of the principal new uses of platinum was in the petroleum industry, where platinum catalysts were introduced to increase the octane rating of gasoline and to manufacture important primary feedstocks for the growing plastics industry.

During the 1960s, demand for platinum in jewellery experienced a spectacular rise in Japan, appealing to the Japanese public by virtue of its purity, colour, prestige and value. Platinum jewellery later succeeded in penetrating other markets – in Germany in the 1970s, Switzerland and Italy in the 1980s and the United Kingdom, the USA and China – today the world’s biggest single market for platinum jewellery - in the 1990s.

In 1974, with its new regulations on air quality, the United States inaugurated the era of the autocatalyst, a technology which uses platinum group metals to convert the noxious gases in vehicle exhausts into harmless substances. Use of autocatalysts has spread worldwide and since its introduction has prevented over 12 billion tonnes of pollution from entering the earth’s atmosphere.

 

 

During the 1980s the rapid increase in the value of precious metals, including platinum, gave rise to the production of a variety of bars and coins, many of them collectable items, to meet demand for platinum as a physical investment product.

By the 1990s, platinum was growing in use as a medical treatment against certain forms of cancer and the same decade saw a multiplication in the uses of machined platinum alloy components to treat cardiac and other disease.

 

 

Full History

A History of Platinum and its Allied Metals by Donald McDonald & Leslie B. Hunt

Probably the definitive history of platinum this book describes the history of platinum and its associated metals, covering important discoveries and scientific work on the platinum group metals up to the early twentieth century. With twenty-four chapters, 450 pages, over 600 references and 235 illustrations (20 in colour) including 100 portraits, A History of Platinum and its Allied Metals is the definitive description of how science was able to progress by means of the unique properties of these metals.

Contents are listed below

      
1  The Beginning of the Story

2  The Platinum of New Granada

3  Early Scientific Enquiries into the Properties and Nature of Platinum

4  Early Attempts to Melt and Work Platinum

5  The Arsenic Process and its Use by the French Goldsmiths

6  The Platinum Age in Spain

7  The Widening of Interest in Platinum and its Properties

8  The Professional Scientists of London and their Societies

9  The Partnership of Smithson Tennant and William Hyde Wollaston

10  The Platinum Industry in France after the Revolution

11  Progress in England after Wollaston

12  The Discovery and Early History of Catalysis

13  The Foundation of the Russian Platinum Industry

14  The Platinum Metals in Early Nineteenth Century Chemistry

15  The Melting of Platinum and the New Metallurgy of Deville and Debray

16  George Matthey and the Building of the British Platinum Industry

17  The Development of the Platinum Industry in Continental Europe

18  The Platinum Metals in the Periodic System

19  Platinum in the Measurement of High Temperatures

20  Platinum Extraction and Fabrication on the American Continents

21  The Growth of Industrial Catalysis with the Platinum Metals

22  Production of Platinum Metals in Soviet Russia

23  The Discovery of the World's Greatest Platinum Resources

24  The Story Continues ...

 

To order a copy

Price: 20 U.K. Pounds, 30 Euros or 45 U.S. Dollars (includes postage and packing).

Please fill in your details at contact us, selecting the category A History of Platinum and its Allied Metals.

 

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