Elementymology & Elements Multidict by Peter van der Krogt
Titanium
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Multilingual dictionary
Language key
Indo-European
Germanic
Titanium en
Titan de lb da sv no is fo
Titaan nl af fy
Italic
Titane fr
Titanio es it
Titani ca oc fur
Titânio pt
Titanio gl
Titan ro
Titanu arm
Slavic
Титан [titan] ru sr mk bg, [tytan] uk
Тытан [tytan] by
Tytan pl
Titan kas cs sl
Titán sk
Titanij hr bos
Baltic
Titanas lt sud
Titāns lv
Celtic
Titaniwm cy
Tíotáiniam ga
Tìotainiam gd
Çhitaanium gv
Tytanyum kw
Titan br
Other Indo-European
Τιτανιο [titanio] el
Titan sq
Տիտան [titan] hy
Indo-Iranian
Титан [titan] oss
Uralic
Titaani fi
Titaan et
Titán hu
Титан [titan] mok
Altaic
Titan tr tg
Титан [titan] kk uz mn
Other (Europe)
Titanioa eu
ტიტანი [titani] ka
East- & South-Asia
チタン [chitan] ja
[tai4 / taai3] zh (mand./cant.)
타이타늄, 타타늄, 타탄 [ta'itanyum, titanyum, titan] ko
Titan vi
ไทเทเนียม [thaitēniam] th
Titanium ms
டைட்டேனியம் [ţaiţţēniyam] ta
Afro-Asiatic
تيتانيوم [tītāniyūm] ar
Titanjum mt
טיטניום [titanium] he
Africa
Titani sw
Artificial
Titano eo
New names
Titanion (TTN) aen
Ninthium dms
Appearance, some properties, a memory peg and a summary of discovery and etymology
Bright gray metal in pure form, but tends to be a bit darker as the purity decreases.
m.p. 1660±10 ºC; 3020±18 ºF
b.p. 3287 ºC; 5949 ºF
density 4.54 g/cc; 283.42 pound/cubic foot
memory peg

1791 William Gregor, England
Τιτανος (Titans) = children of the Earth (Greek mythology)
named by M.H. Klaproth after 1795

History & Etymology

The Cornish clergyman William Gregor (1761-1817) was interested in minerals and was acknowledged as greatly skilled by Berzelius. He analyzed a number of substances such as a black magnetic sand from the Menachan valley in his own parish in Cornwall (England). His analysis was published in 1791. The sand is black, and in external appearance resembles gunpowder. It included 45% reddish brown calx, which dissolved in sulfuric acid to give a yellow solution which became purple when reduced with zinc, tin, or iron. When the pulverized mineral was fused with powdered charcoal (a procedure that often reduces an ore to metal) a purple slag was formed. While he modestly claimed these were only disconnected facts, his friends agreed that this must be a new mineral.

The mineral was named menachanite (or ilmenite), the new earth in it was regarded as the oxide of a new metal, menachin. Mineral and metal were after the spot where it was found. The discovery received no acclaim but when Martin Heinrich Klaproth (1743-1817) separated rutile, or red schörl, from Hungary in 1795, he recognized the similarity to Gregor's menachan. He reported (note):

"that menachanite has for its constituent parts Iron, and a peculiar metallic oxyd of an unknown nature. By the following examination it will appear that this substance, which besides iron, forms the second chief component principle of menachanite, is precisely the very same which constitutes the Hungarian red schörl."
Klaproth gave the following curious reason for naming the new element Titanium:
    "Whenever no name can be found for a new fossil which indicates its peculiar and characteristic properties (in which situation I find myself at present) I think it best to choose such a denomination as means nothing of itself, and thus can give no rise to any erroneous ideas. (as Lavoisier had suggested) In consequence of this, as I did in the case of Uranium, I shall borrow the name for this metallic substance from mythology, and in particular from the Titans, the first sons of the earth. I therefore call this new metallic genus Titanium."
The metal was first isolated by J.J. Berzelius in 1825. The first pure Titanium was prepared in 1910, by the New Zealand-born U.S. metallurgist Matthew A. Hunter at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (Troy, N.Y., U.S.) (mainly after Trapp).

The Titans (Τιτανος) are, in Greek mythology, a race of godlike giants, children of the Earth, who were considered to be the personifications of the forces of nature. They are the twelve children (six sons and six daughters) of the Heaven (Όυρανος [Ouranos]) and Earth (Γαια [Gaea]). Each son married, or had children of, one of his sisters. They are: Cronus and Rhea, Iapetus and Themis, Oceanus and Tethys, Hyperion and Theia, Crius and Mnemosyne, and Coeus and Phoebe (Encyclopedia Mythica).

Zeus in battle with the Titans.
Source: Stephane Mallarmé, Les Dieux Antiques, nouvelle mythologie illustrée. Paris, 1880. (this image from Encyclopedia Mythica)
.


Chemistianity 1873
EMYAN
TITANIUM, the Air absorbing Metalloid,
Whose Nitrogen compounds in copper-colour'd cubes,
Are found in certain kinds of Iron Slag,
In the free state is known only in gray powder,
With chemical properties much like Tin.
J. Carrington Sellars, Chemistianity, 1873, p. 91
Further reading
  • Mary Elvira Weeks, Discovery of the Elements, comp. rev. by Heny M. Leicester (Easton, Pa.: Journal of Chemical Education, 1968), pp. 520-525.

Sources Index of Persons Index of Alleged Elements

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© Peter van der Krogt