Nickel is a chemical element with the chemical symbol "Ni" and atomic number 28. It is a silvery-white lustrous metal with a slight golden tinge. Nickel
belongs to the transition metals and is hard and ductile.
Pure nickel shows a significant chemical activity that can be observed when
nickel is powdered to
maximize the exposed surface area on which reactions can occur, but
larger pieces of the metal are slow to react with air at ambient conditions due
to the formation of a protective oxide surface. Even then, nickel is reactive
enough with oxygen so that native nickel is rarely found on Earth's
surface, being mostly confined to the interiors of larger nickel–iron
meteorites that were
protected from oxidation during their time in space. On Earth, such native
nickel is always found in combination with iron, a reflection of those
elements' origin as major end products of supernova nucleo synthesis. An iron–nickel
mixture is thought to compose Earth's inner core.
Nickel is
one of four elements that are ferromagnetic around room temperature. Alnico permanent magnets based partly on
nickel are of intermediate strength between iron-based permanent magnets and rare-earth
magnets. The metal is chiefly valuable in the modern world for the alloys it forms; about 60% of world
production is used in nickel-steels (particularly stainless steel).
Other common alloys, as well as some new super alloys,
make up most of the remainder of world nickel use, with chemical uses for
nickel compounds consuming less than 3% of production. As a compound, nickel has a number of
niche chemical manufacturing uses, such as a catalyst for
hydrogenation. Enzymes of some microorganisms and plants contain
nickel as an active site,
which makes the metal an essential nutrient for them.
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