Scandium is a chemical element with symbol "Sc" and atomic number 21. A silvery-white metallic transition metal,
it has historically been sometimes classified as a rare earth element, together with yttrium and the lanthanoids.
It was discovered in 1879 by spectral analysis of the minerals euxenite and gadolinite from Scandinavia.
Scandium
is present in most of the deposits of rare earth and uranium compounds, but it is extracted from
these ores in only a few mines worldwide. Because of the low availability and
the difficulties in the preparation of metallic scandium, which was first done
in 1937, it took until the 1970s before applications for scandium were
developed. The positive effects of scandium on aluminium alloys were discovered in the 1970s,
and its use in such alloys remains its only major application. The global trade
of the pure metal is around a hundred pounds a year on average.
The
properties of scandium compounds are intermediate between those of aluminium and yttrium. A diagonal relationship exists between the behavior of magnesium and scandium, just as there is between beryllium and aluminium. In the chemical
compounds of the elements shown as group 3, above, the predominant oxidation
state is +3.
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