Cobalt is a chemical element with symbol "Co" and atomic number 27. It is found
naturally only in chemically combined form. The free element, produced by
reductive smelting, is a hard, lustrous, silver-gray metal.
Cobalt-based
blue pigments (cobalt blue) have been used since ancient times for jewelry
and paints, and to impart a distinctive blue tint to glass, but the color was
later thought by alchemists to be due to the known metal bismuth. Miners had long
used the name kobold ore (German for goblin ore) for some of the
blue-pigment producing minerals; they were named because they were poor in
known metals and gave poisonous arsenic-containing fumes
upon smelting. In 1735, such ores were found to be reducible to a new metal
(the first discovered since ancient times), and this was ultimately named for
the kobold.
Today,
some cobalt is produced specifically from various metallic-lustered ores, for
example cobaltite (CoAsS), but the main source of the
element is as a by-product of copper and nickel mining. The copper belt in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Zambia yields most of the cobalt metal mined
worldwide.
Cobalt is
used in the preparation of magnetic, wear-resistant
and high-strength alloys. Cobalt silicate
and cobalt(II) aluminate (CoAl2O4, cobalt blue) give a
distinctive deep blue color to glass, smalt, ceramics, inks, paints and varnishes. Cobalt occurs
naturally as only one stable isotope, cobalt-59. Cobalt-60 is a commercially important
radioisotope, used as a radioactive tracer and in the production of gamma rays.
Cobalt is
the active center of coenzymes called cobalamins, the most
common example of which is vitamin B12.
As such it is an essential tracedietary mineral for all animals. Cobalt in inorganic
form is also an active nutrient for bacteria, algae and fungi.
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