Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Rare Earth Elements: Now A Pawn In The US- China Trade War?

Given President Trump’s ill advised tariffs on Chinese exports now sends the world’s economy on the precipice of recession, will China be using its rare earth metals industry as a pawn in the ongoing US-China trade war?

By: Ringo Bones

The ongoing US-China trade war – what is it really good for? Absolutely nothing says most economists, but as it rages on, will rare earth elements be drafted as reliable pawns in this ongoing trade war?

Believe it or not, there was a time where the United States and the Soviet Union were the leading producers and users of rare earth elements at the height of the Cold War. Given that rare earth elements are close homologues of elements used in the manufacture of atomic weapons, the Cold War era stockpiling of nuclear weapons means that the mining and production of weapons grade uranium has produce a quite useful byproduct – i.e. rare earth elements. Since the end of the Cold War, Beijing has been busy making atomic reactors for the much needed energy demands in modernizing its industry and over the years, Mainland China now produces 37-percent of the global supply of rare earth elements.

Rare earth elements are currently being used in the manufacture of a wide range of devices that includes smartphones, unmanned military drones. Neodymium, for example, is used to make those compact and powerful magnets found in smartphone speakers and haptic feedback devices, while terbium is used to make solid-state hard drives. It seems that modern life is very dependent on the low cost availability of rare earth elements.

Mainland China gained a monopoly on the production of rare earth elements because extracting them from the ground entails a lot of radioactive byproducts that were previously relegated to atomic weapons production at the height of the Cold War - which means that rare earth element mining is not so environmentally friendly. And given Beijing’s rather lax environmental laws, Mainland China is now second to none when it comes to the global rare earth metal industry.

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

2019 – International Year of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements

Did you know that 150 years ago Russian scientist Dmitri Mendeleev discovered and established the Periodic System for the benefit for all mankind?

By: Ringo Bones

2019 became the official International Year of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements after the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed it during its 74th Plenary Meeting back in December 20, 2017. And based on the 202 EX/Decision 43, the 2019 International Year of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements – also known as the IYPT 2019 – was adopted by the UNESCO General Conference at its 39th Session (39 C/decision 60). Back in April 1, 2018, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) joined in the planning and coordination to make the IYPT 2019 to be “more visible” to everyone concerned. Well, the IUPAC succeeded in making the 2011 International Year of Chemistry more or less visible to everyone concerned back then.

1869 is considered as the year of the discovery of the Periodic System by the Russian scientist Dmitri Mendeleev. The IYPT 2019 also commemorates the 150th anniversary of the establishment of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements. The International Year aims to recognize the importance of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements as one of the most important and influential achievements in modern science reflecting the essence not only of chemistry, but also of physics, biology and other basic sciences disciplines. The IYPT 2019 is also an opportunity to reflect upon many aspects of the periodic table, including its history, the role of women in research, global trends and perspectives on science for sustainable development and the social and economic impacts of this field.  

Said to be inspired by the card game solitaire, Dmitri Mendeleev’s periodic table of chemical elements is based on the Russian chemist’s discovery that a natural order existed among the elements. Mendeleev arranged the chemical elements according to their atomic weight and then pointed out that elements side by side in adjacent columns – i.e. vanadium, niobium and tantalum – behaved in the same way chemically. Mendeleev’s newly discovered periodic table of chemical elements was so accurate that it allowed him to accurately predict the chemical properties of elements not yet discovered during his lifetime. By the way, Dmitri Mendeleev was born in 1834 in Siberia and passed away in 1934.