What are the characteristics of ytterbium?

               Ytterbium is a bright metal with silvery white colour. It is a soft metal, and is both ductile and malleable. The metal tarnishes quickly in air, and reacts slowly with water. Ytterbium is considered to be moderately toxic. Closeness to the  compounds  of ytterbium can cause irritation to skin and eyes.

               Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac, a Swiss chemist, is reputed to have discovered ytterbium in 1878. However, ytterbium as a pure metal was produced only in 1953, at the Ames Laboratory, Iowa, by A. Daane, David Dennison and Frank Spedding. The element is named after Ytterby, a village in Sweden.

               Very rarely is ytterbium found free in nature. However, the element is abundantly available in a number of minerals such as monazite, gadolinite euxenite and xenotime.

               There are many isotopes of ytterbium. Isotope 160Yb is radioactive, and is used in portable x-ray machines that need no electricity. It is used in stress gauges to monitor ground deformations caused by earthquakes or underground explosions. Atomic clocks also use ytterbium for accuracy of time.

               The atomic number of ytterbium is 70, and its atomic symbol is Yb.

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