Dictionary Definition
manganese n : a hard brittle gray polyvalent
metallic element that resembles iron but is not magnetic; used in
making steel; occurs in many minerals [syn: Mn, atomic
number 25]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Alternative spellings
- manganesium (obsolete)
- manganesum (obsolete)
Etymology
manganèse, from manganese, by alteration from magnesia, magnesia, from Ancient Greek μαγνησία (magnēsia), after Μαγνησία'' (Magnēsia), MagnesiaPronunciation
Extensive Definition
Manganese () is a chemical
element that is designated by the symbol Mn and has an atomic
number of 25. It is found as the free element
in nature (often in combination with iron), and in many minerals.
The free element is a metal with important industrial metal alloy
uses. Manganese ions are variously colored, and are used
industrially as pigments
and as oxidation chemicals. Manganese (II) ions function as
cofactors for a number of enzymes; the element is thus a
required trace mineral for all known living organisms.
Notable chemical characteristics
Manganese is a gray-white metal resembling iron. It is a hard metal and is very brittle, fusible with difficulty, but easily oxidized. Manganese metal and its common ions are paramagnetic. This means that, while manganese metal does not form a permanent magnet, it does exhibit strong magnetic properties in the presence of an external magnetic field.The most common oxidation
states of manganese are +2, +3, +4, +6 and +7, though oxidation
states from +1 to +7 are observed. Mn2+ often competes with Mg2+ in
biological systems, and manganese compounds where manganese is in
oxidation state +7 are powerful oxidizing agents.
Industrially important compounds
Methylcyclopentadienyl manganese tricarbonyl is used as an additive in unleaded gasoline to boost octane rating and reduce engine knocking. The manganese in this unusual organometallic compound is in the +1 oxidation state.The most stable oxidation state for manganese is
+2, which has a pink to red color, and many manganese(II) compounds
are known, such as manganese(II)
sulfate (MnSO4) and manganese(II)
chloride (MnCl2). This oxidation state is also seen in the
mineral rhodochrosite, (manganese(II)
carbonate). The +2 oxidation state is the state use in living
organisms for essential functions; all of the other states are much
more toxic.
The +3 oxidation state is known, in compounds
such as manganese(III)
acetate, but these are quite powerful oxidizing
agents.
Manganese(IV)
oxide (manganese dioxide, MnO2) is used as a reagent in
organic
chemistry for the oxidation of benzylic alcohols (i.e. adjacent to an
aromatic
ring). Manganese
dioxide has been used since antiquity to oxidatively neutralize
the greenish tinge in glass caused by trace amounts of iron
contamination. MnO2 is also used in the manufacture of oxygen and
chlorine, and in drying black paints. In some preparations it is a
brown pigment that can
be used to make paint and
is a constituent of natural umber.
Manganese(IV)
oxide was used in the original type of dry cell
battery as an electron acceptor from zinc, and is the blackish
material found when opening carbon-zinc type flashlight cells. The
same material also functions in newer alkaline
batteries (usually battery cells), which use the same basic
reaction, but a different electrolyte mixture.
Manganese
phosphating is used as a treatment for rust and corrosion
prevention on steel.
Permanganate (+7 oxidation state) manganese
compounds are purple, and can color glass an amethyst color.
Potassium
permanganate, sodium
permanganate and barium
permanganate are all potent oxidizers. Potassium
permanganate, also called Condy's
crystals, is a commonly used laboratory reagent because of its oxidizing
properties and finds use as a topical medicine (for example, in the
treatment of fish diseases). Solutions of potassium permanganate
were among the first stains and fixatives to be used in the
preparation of biological cells and tissues for electron
microscopy.
Substitutes: Manganese has no satisfactory
substitute in its major applications, which are related to
metallurgical alloy use. In minor applications, (e.g., manganese
phosphating), zinc and
sometimes vanadium are
viable substitutes. In disposable battery manufacture, standard and
alkaline cells using manganese will probably eventually be mostly
replaced with lithium
battery technology.
The overall level and nature of manganese use in
the United States is expected to remain about the same in the near
term. No practical technologies exist for replacing manganese with
other materials or for using domestic deposits or other
accumulations to reduce the complete dependence of the United
States on other countries for manganese ore.
Metal alloys
Manganese is essential to iron and steel production by virtue
of its sulfur-fixing, deoxidizing, and alloying properties. Steelmaking,
including its ironmaking component, has accounted for most
manganese demand, presently in the range of 85% to 90% of the total
demand. Among a variety of other uses, manganese is a key component
of low-cost stainless
steel formulations and certain widely used aluminium alloys.
The metal is very occasionally used in coins; the
only United States coins to use manganese were the
"wartime" nickel from 1942–1945, and, since 2000,
dollar coins. The EU uses manganese in 1 and 2 Euro coins, due
to greater and cheaper availability.
History
The origin of the name manganese is complex. In ancient times, two black minerals from Magnesia in what is now modern Greece were both called magnes, but were thought to differ in gender. The male magnes attracted iron, and was the iron ore we now know as lodestone or magnetite, and which probably gave us the term magnet. The female magnes ore did not attract iron, but was used to decolorize glass. This feminine magnes was later called magnesia, known now in modern times as pyrolusite or manganese dioxide. This mineral is never magnetic (although manganese itself is paramagnetic). In the 16th century, the latter compound was called manganesum (note the two n's instead of one) by glassmakers, possibly as a corruption of two words since alchemists and glassmakers eventually had to differentiate a magnesia negra (the black ore) from magnesia alba (a white ore, also from Magnesia, also useful in glassmaking). Mercati called magnesia negra Manganesa, and finally the metal isolated from it became known as manganese (German: Mangan). The name magnesia eventually was then used to refer only to the white magnesia alba (magnesium oxide), which provided the name magnesium for that free element, when it was eventually isolated, much later.Manganese compounds were in use in prehistoric
times; paints that were pigmented with manganese
dioxide can be traced back 17,000 years. The Egyptians and
Romans used manganese compounds in glass-making, to either remove
color from glass or add color to it. Manganese can be found in the
iron ores used by the Spartans. Some
speculate that the exceptional hardness of Spartan steels derives
from the inadvertent production of an iron-manganese alloy.
In the 17th century, German chemist Johann
Glauber first produced permanganate, a useful
laboratory reagent (although some people believe that it was
discovered by Ignites Kaim
in 1770). By the mid-18th century, manganese
dioxide was in use in the manufacture of chlorine (which it
produces when mixed with hydrochloric
acid, or commercially with a mixture of dilute sulfuric
acid and sodium chloride). The Swedish chemist Scheele
was the first to recognize that manganese was an element, and his
colleague, Johan
Gottlieb Gahn, isolated the pure element in 1774 by reduction
of the dioxide with carbon. Around the beginning of
the 19th century, scientists began exploring the use of manganese
in steelmaking, with patents being granted for its use at the time.
In 1816, it was noted that adding manganese to iron made it harder,
without making it any more brittle. In 1837, British academic
James
Couper noted an association between heavy exposure to manganese
in mines with a form of Parkinson's
Disease. In 1912, manganese
phosphating electrochemical conversion coatings for protecting
firearms against rust and corrosion were patented in the United
States, and have seen widespread use ever since.
In the 20th century, manganese
dioxide has seen wide commercial use as the chief cathodic
material for commercial disposable dry cells and
dry batteries of both the standard (carbon-zinc) and alkaline
type.
Biological role
Manganese is an essential trace nutrient in all forms of life.The classes of enzymes that have manganese
cofactors
are very broad and include such classes as oxidoreductases,
transferases,
hydrolases, lyases, isomerases, ligases, lectins, and integrins. The reverse
transcriptases of many retroviruses (though not
lentiviruses such as
HIV) contain
manganese. The best known manganese-containing polypeptides may be
arginase, the diphtheria
toxin, and Mn-containing superoxide
dismutase (Mn-SOD).
Mn-SOD is the type of SOD present in eukaryotic
mitochondria, and also in most bacteria (this fact is in keeping
with the bacterial-origin theory of mitochondria). The Mn-SOD
enzyme is probably one of the most ancient, for nearly all
organisms living in the presence of oxygen use it to deal with the
toxic effects of superoxide, formed from the
1-electron reduction of dioxygen. Exceptions include a few kinds of
bacteria such as Lactobacillus
plantarum and related lactobacilli, which use a
different non-enzymatic mechanism, involving manganese (Mn2+) ions
complexed with polyphosphate directly for this task, indicating how
this function possibly evolved in aerobic life.
The human body contains about 10 mg of
manganese,which is stored mainly in liver & kidneys.
Manganese is also important in photosynthetic
oxygen
evolution in chloroplasts in plants,
which are also evolutionarily of bacterial origin. The oxygen
evolving complex (OEC), a water-oxidizing enzyme contained in
chloroplast membrane, and which is involved in the terminal
photooxidation
of water during the light
reactions of photosynthesis, has a
metalloenzyme core containing four atoms of manganese For this
reason, most broad-spectrum plant fertilizers contain
manganese.
Occurrence
Manganese occurs principally as pyrolusite (MnO2), braunite, (Mn2+Mn3+6SiO12), psilomelane (Ba(Mn2+)(Mn4+)8O16(OH)4), and to a lesser extent as rhodochrosite (MnCO3). Land-based resources are large but irregularly distributed; those of the United States are very low grade and have potentially high extraction costs. Over 80% of the known world manganese resources are found in South Africa and Ukraine. Other important manganese deposits are in China, Australia, Brazil, Gabon, India, and Mexico.US Import Sources (1998-2001): Manganese ore:
Gabon, 70%; South Africa, 10%; Australia, 9%; Mexico, 5%; and
other, 6%. Ferromanganese: South Africa, 47%; France, 22%; Mexico,
8%; Australia, 8%; and other, 15%. Manganese contained in all
manganese imports: South Africa, 31%; Gabon, 21%; Australia, 13%;
Mexico, 8%; and other, 27%.
Vast quantities of manganese exist in manganese
nodules on the ocean floor.
Attempts to find economically viable methods of harvesting
manganese nodules were abandoned in the 1970s.
See also manganese
minerals.
Isotopes
Naturally occurring manganese is composed of 1 stable isotope; 55Mn. 18 radioisotopes have been characterized with the most stable being 53Mn with a half-life of 3.7 million years, 54Mn with a half-life of 312.3 days, and 52Mn with a half-life of 5.591 days. All of the remaining radioactive isotopes have half lives that are less than 3 hours and the majority of these have half lives that are less than 1 minute. This element also has 3 meta states.Manganese is part of the iron group of elements which are
thought to be synthesized in large stars shortly before supernova explosion. 53Mn
decays to 53Cr with a
half-life
of 3.7 million years. Because of its relatively short half-life,
53Mn is an extinct radionuclide. Manganese
isotopic contents are typically combined with chromium isotopic contents and
have found application in isotope
geology and radiometric
dating. Mn-Cr isotopic ratios reinforce the evidence from
26Al and
107Pd for
the early history of the solar
system. Variations in 53Cr/52Cr and Mn/Cr ratios from several
meteorites indicate an
initial 53Mn/55Mn ratio that suggests Mn-Cr isotopic systematics
must result from in-situ decay of 53Mn in differentiated planetary
bodies. Hence 53Mn provides additional evidence for nucleosynthetic
processes immediately before coalescence of the solar
system.
The isotopes of manganese range in atomic
weight from 46 u
(46Mn) to 65 u (65Mn). The primary decay mode
before the most abundant stable isotope, 55Mn, is electron
capture and the primary mode after is beta
decay.
Precautions
Manganese compounds are less toxic than those of
other widespread metals such as nickel and copper. Exposure to manganese
dusts and fumes should not exceed the ceiling value of 5 mg/m3 even
for short periods because of its toxicity level. Manganese poses a
particular risk for children due to its propensity to bind to CH-7
receptors. Manganese poisoning has been linked to impaired motor
skills and cognitive disorders. Chronic exposure to manganese dust
has caused miners to go mad.
Acidic permanganate solutions will oxidize any
organic material they come into contact with. The oxidation process
can generate enough heat to ignite some organic substances.
In 2005, a study suggested a possible link
between manganese inhalation and central nervous system toxicity in
rats. It is hypothesized that long-term exposure to the naturally
occurring manganese in shower water puts up to 8.7 million
Americans at risk.
A form of neurodegeneration similar to Parkinson's
Disease called "manganism" has been linked to
manganese exposure amongst miners and smelters since the early 19th
Century. Allegations of inhalation-induced manganism have been made
regarding the welding industry. Manganese exposure USA is regulated by
Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
References
External links
manganese in Afrikaans: Mangaan
manganese in Arabic: منغنيز
manganese in Azerbaijani: Manqan
manganese in Bengali: ম্যাঙ্গানিজ
manganese in Belarusian: Марганец
manganese in Bosnian: Mangan
manganese in Bulgarian: Манган
manganese in Catalan: Manganès
manganese in Chuvash: Марганец
manganese in Czech: Mangan
manganese in Corsican: Manganese
manganese in Welsh: Manganis
manganese in Danish: Mangan
manganese in German: Mangan
manganese in Estonian: Mangaan
manganese in Modern Greek (1453-):
Μαγγάνιο
manganese in Spanish: Manganeso
manganese in Esperanto: Mangano
manganese in Basque: Manganeso
manganese in Persian: منگنز
manganese in French: Manganèse
manganese in Friulian: Manganês
manganese in Manx: Manganaish
manganese in Galician: Manganeso
manganese in Korean: 망가니즈
manganese in Armenian: Մանգան
manganese in Hindi: मंगनीज
manganese in Croatian: Mangan
manganese in Ido: Mangano
manganese in Indonesian: Mangan
manganese in Icelandic: Mangan
manganese in Italian: Manganese
manganese in Hebrew: מנגן
manganese in Javanese: Mangan
manganese in Kannada: ಮ್ಯಾಂಗನೀಸ್
manganese in Swahili (macrolanguage):
Manganisi
manganese in Haitian: Manganèz
manganese in Kurdish: Manganez
manganese in Latin: Manganum
manganese in Latvian: Mangāns
manganese in Luxembourgish: Mangan
manganese in Lithuanian: Manganas
manganese in Lojban: jinmrmanga
manganese in Hungarian: Mangán
manganese in Macedonian: Манган
manganese in Malayalam: മാംഗനീസ്
manganese in Dutch: Mangaan
manganese in Japanese: マンガン
manganese in Norwegian: Mangan
manganese in Norwegian Nynorsk: Mangan
manganese in Occitan (post 1500): Manganès
manganese in Uzbek: Marganets
manganese in Low German: Mangan
manganese in Polish: Mangan
manganese in Portuguese: Manganês
manganese in Romanian: Mangan
manganese in Quechua: Manganisu
manganese in Russian: Марганец
manganese in Sicilian: Manganesi
manganese in Simple English: Manganese
manganese in Slovak: Mangán
manganese in Slovenian: Mangan
manganese in Serbian: Манган
manganese in Serbo-Croatian: Mangan
manganese in Finnish: Mangaani
manganese in Swedish: Mangan
manganese in Tamil: மாங்கனீசு
manganese in Thai: แมงกานีส
manganese in Vietnamese: Mangan
manganese in Turkish: Mangan
manganese in Ukrainian: Манган (елемент)
manganese in Chinese: 锰