Cerium Nanoparticle Dispersion

Cerium Nanodispersion

CAS #:

Linear Formula:

Ce

MDL Number:

MFCD00010924

EC No.:

231-154-9

ORDER

PRODUCT Product Code ORDER SAFETY DATA TECHNICAL DATA
(2N) 99% Cerium Nanoparticle Dispersion
CE-M-02-NPD
Pricing > SDS > Data Sheet >
(3N) 99.9% Cerium Nanoparticle Dispersion
CE-M-03-NPD
Pricing > SDS > Data Sheet >
(4N) 99.99% Cerium Nanoparticle Dispersion
CE-M-04-NPD
Pricing > SDS > Data Sheet >
(5N) 99.999% Cerium Nanoparticle Dispersion
CE-M-05-NPD
Pricing > SDS > Data Sheet >

Cerium Nanoparticle Dispersion Properties (Theoretical)

Molecular Weight 140.12
Appearance solid
Melting Point 795 °C
Boiling Point 3360 °C
Density N/A
Bulk Density N/A
True Density 6689 kg/m3
Size Range N/A
Average Particle Size N/A
Specific Surface Area N/A
Morphology N/A
Solubility in H2O N/A
Poisson's Ratio 0.24
Thermal Expansion (r.t.) 6.3 µm/(m·K)
Vickers Hardness 270 MPa
Young's Modulus 33.6 GPa

Cerium Nanoparticle Dispersion Health & Safety Information

Signal Word Danger
Hazard Statements H228-H261-H302-H312-H315-H319-H332-H335
Hazard Codes F,Xn
Risk Codes 11-14/15-20/21/22-36/37/38
Safety Statements 26-36/37/39-43
RTECS Number N/A
Transport Information UN 3078 4.3/PG 2
WGK Germany 3
MSDS / SDS

About Cerium Nanoparticle Dispersion

Cerium Nanoparticle Dispersions are suspensions of cerium nanoparticles in water or various organic solvents such as ethanol or mineral oil. American Elements manufactures metallic nanopowders and nanoparticles with typical particle sizes ranging from 10 to 200nm and in coated and surface functionalized forms. Our nanodispersion and nanofluid experts can provide technical guidance for selecting the most appropriate particle size, solvent, and coating material for a given application. We can also produce custom nanomaterials tailored to the specific requirements of our customers upon request.

Cerium Nanoparticle Dispersion Synonyms

Cerium nanopowder suspension, aqueous Cerium nanoparticle solution, Cerium nanofluid

Chemical Identifiers

Linear Formula Ce
MDL Number MFCD00010924
EC No. 231-154-9
Pubchem CID 23974
IUPAC Name N/A
SMILES [Ce]
InchI Identifier InChI=1S/Ce
InchI Key GWXLDORMOJMVQZ-UHFFFAOYSA-N

Packaging Specifications

Typical bulk packaging includes palletized plastic 5 gallon/25 kg. pails, fiber and steel drums to 1 ton super sacks in full container (FCL) or truck load (T/L) quantities. Research and sample quantities and hygroscopic, oxidizing or other air sensitive materials may be packaged under argon or vacuum. Shipping documentation includes a Certificate of Analysis and Safety Data Sheet (SDS). Solutions are packaged in polypropylene, plastic or glass jars up to palletized 440 gallon liquid totes, and 36,000 lb. tanker trucks.

Payment Methods

American Elements accepts checks, wire transfers, ACH, most major credit and debit cards (Visa, MasterCard, AMEX, Discover) and Paypal.

For the convenience of our international customers, American Elements offers the following additional payment methods:

SOFORT bank tranfer payment for Austria, Belgium, Germany and SwitzerlandJCB cards for Japan and WorldwideBoleto Bancario for BraziliDeal payments for the Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Italy, Poland, Spain, Switzerland, and the United KingdomGiroPay for GermanyDankort cards for DenmarkElo cards for BrazileNETS for SingaporeCartaSi for ItalyCarte-Bleue cards for FranceChina UnionPayHipercard cards for BrazilTROY cards for TurkeyBC cards for South KoreaRuPay for India

Related Elements

Cerium

See more Cerium products. Cerium (atomic symbol: Ce, atomic number: 58) is a Block F, Group 3, Period 6 element with an atomic weight of 140.116. The number of electrons in each of cerium's shells is 2, 8, 18, 19, 9, 2 and its electron configuration is [Xe]4f2 6s2. Cerium Bohr ModelThe cerium atom has a radius of 182.5 pm and a Van der Waals radius of 235 pm. In its elemental form, cerium has a silvery white appearance. Cerium is the most abundant of the rare earth metals. It is characterized chemically by having two valence states, the +3 cerous and +4 ceric states. The ceric state is the only non-trivalent rare earth ion stable in aqueous solutions. Elemental CeriumIt is therefore strongly acidic and oxidizing, in addition to being moderately toxic.The cerous state closely resembles the other trivalent rare earths. Cerium is found in the minerals allanite, bastnasite, hydroxylbastnasite, monazite, rhabdophane, synchysite and zircon. Cerium was discovered by Martin Heinrich Klaproth, Jöns Jakob Berzelius, and Wilhelm Hisinger in 1803 and first isolated by Carl Gustaf Mosander in 1839. The element was named after the asteroid Ceres, which itself was named after the Roman god of agriculture.

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