The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

Astatine (At) is the rarest element in the world, but it’s a gas and not used a great deal in everyday technology. The top rare elements used in modern technologies are metals, so that’s what we’ll look at today.

Thulium (Tm: atomic number 69)

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

The rarest rare earth element, thulium is a silvery-gray metal. It’s so soft that a knife will slice right through it. Swedish chemist Per Teodor Cleve discovered in 1879 when separating other elements. It’s not found in pure form, but together with other minerals and always in tiny amounts.

Chief uses include X-ray machines, lasers, magnetic ceramics, microwaves, and metal alloys.

Osmium (Os: atomic number 76)

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

Osmium fragment (Os) is a metallic chemical element belonging to the group of platinum metals that is used in electrical conductors.

Discovered in 1803 by Englishman Smithson Tennant, osmium is the densest element. Scientists state a brick-sized amount of osmium weighs 56 pounds. Blue-gray metal osmium means ‘smell’ in Greek, it’s unaffected by water, air, or acid and is a by-product of nickel refinement.

It’s used to make super hard alloys and high-stress joints such as needles and ballpoint pen tips. It’s also a component of fingerprint technology and pacemakers.

Rhodium (Rh: atomic number 45)

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

Rhodium is a great resistance to acids and corrosive substances and is used in jewelry. It’s the most expensive metal in the world.

Rhodium is a rare metal element and highly valuable, even more so than gold. It’s a silver-white metal with a reflective surface that doesn’t corrode. Englishman William Wollaston discovered rhodium in 1803 in platinum ore from South America. Rhodium is the rarest of all non-radioactive metals.

Today, rhodium use is chiefly in vehicle catalytic convertors to reduce nitrogen oxide from exhaust fumes. A focus on clean vehicles means rhodium’s value is likely to accelerate in the future.

Rhodium hardens jewelry, and alloys, and improves rust resistance of high-temperature techs such as furnace windings, glass fiber production, and aircraft spark plugs.

Iridium (Ir: atomic number 77)

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

Iridium is used in high-strength alloys that can withstand high temperatures.

The highest-density element and the most corrosion-resistant is iridium. It’s a white-yellow rare earth element discovered by a group of scientists, including Smithson Tennant, in 1803.

Because it doesn’t corrode, iridium forms standard weight and measurements. It’s also a hardening agent for platinum and is found in electrical contact and optical lenses. On the downside, it is brittle and difficult to work with unless it’s heated first.

Iridium is so rare in its pure form that scientists estimate there are two parts per billion in the Earth’s crust.

Praseodymium (Pr: atomic number 59)

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

Praseodymium was discovered in 1885.

Because praseodymium (that’s pra-see-oh-dim-ee-em) turns green when it’s compounded with oxygen its name means “green twin” in Greek. This rare earth element is a soft, yellowy-silver metal that’s slowly reactive with air, but reacts quickly with water.

Discovered in 1885, today praseodymium provides yellow tints in glass and ceramics, it’s a component in permanent magnet alloys and studio lighting carbon arc electrodes. Praseodymium is also an important part of cell phone microphones and speakers.

Europium (Eu: atomic number 63)

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

Europium is a silvery-white element.

A latecomer to the periodic table, Frenchman Eugene Demarcay discovered europium in 1903.

It is silvery, soft, and the most reactive of the lanthanides. It reacts quickly with acids, air, and water in a similar way to calcium.

Today europium is a component of television screens, computer monitors, and smartphone screens (it makes the red shades) and in nuclear rods because it absorbs neutrons.

Neodymium (Nd: atomic number 60)

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

Neodymium stone is the world’s strongest magnetic ore used in the technology industry.

Discovered in 1885 in monazite and bastnasite rocks is neodymium. It’s silvery-yellow and highly reactive with air, water, or acids.

The main uses for neodymium are magnets, welder’s glasses, and lasers that color glass. It’s an incredible spectral filter for astronomical tools and is often used in tanning solariums to filter infrared rays. Neodymium helps power electric cars, cell phone screens, televisions, and rechargeable batteries too.

Terbium (Tb: atomic number 65)

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

Terbium is gray-silver and easily cut with a knife. This rare element reacts quickly with water and acids, but slowly with air. Carl Mosander of Sweden discovered it in 1843.

Today’s terbium applications include cell phone and television screens (where it produces the green shade), semiconductors, low-energy lightbulbs, and lasers. Including terbium in medical X-ray technology improves its safety by producing top-quality images with short exposure times.

Dysprosium (Dy: atomic number 66)

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

Dysprosium means “hard to obtain” in Greek. Frenchman Paul Lecoq de Boisbaudran discovered its existence in 1886. Dysprosium is bright silver and soft enough to cut with a knife.

Today it’s used in wind turbines and electric car engine magnets and it’s a component that makes cell phones vibrate.

Lanthanum (La: atomic number 57)

The Top 10 Rarest Elements in the World

Lanthanum is the first in the rare earth element series. It’s a soft silvery-white metal that rapidly tarnishes in the air. Swedish chemist Carl Mosander discovered lanthanum in 1839 by extracting it from 1803’s discovery – the element cerium.

First used in gas lantern mantles, it is now an important component of carbon lighting such as cinema projection and flints in cigarette lighters. Glass created with lanthanum improves camera lens quality. Lanthanum alloy stores hydrogen gas in electric cars safely and it’s an essential component of nickel-metal batteries for hybrid cars.