IC 6389 Platinum

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 78
- File Size:
- 16098 KB
- Publication Date:
- Feb 1, 1931
Abstract
Platinum and its allied metals osmium, iridium, rhodium , palladium,
and ruthenium are the most costly of the better-known metals and combine properties
that make them unique among the elements . For a number of isolated uses
substitutes have been found which are cheaper and quite as satisfactory ; but
none will replace platinum in many of its varied uses , and there is a large and
growing demand for purposes for which no economical substitutes are known .
As this paper is being written the supply of platinum tends further
to increase as a result of the exploitation of newly developed resources and
the expansion of production from older sources . In obedience to economic law
prices have declined steadily . Buyers , always reluctant to commit themselves
on a falling market , have maintained a waiting attitude , and consumption trends
are not clearly indicated . Should platinum again approach the price of gold ,
the natural tendency would be to use more of the metal . In recent years , however
, the industrial and scientific uses of platinum have become subordinate to
its consumption in jewelry . In matters of personal adornment the popular whim
and not practical utility is the dominant factor in demand , and it does not
follow that lowered prices will stimulate demand . The substitution of white
gold and certain plated goods for platinum may be checked by cheaper platinum ,
but a fickle public that turned from gold to platinum when platinum became the
more costly metal can not with certainty be expected to buy more platinum jewelry
because more of the metal than formerly may now be had for the same price . The
dearth of platinum during and for some years after the World War had a profound
effect upon prices , and this in turn wrought important changes in the field of
consumption . When prices advanced the chemical industry, formerly the leading
consumer of platinum, was forced to economize in its consumption of the metal
and to substitute other metals whenever it could . Somewhat similar conditions
resulted in the electrical industry and in the use of platinum in dentistry .
Some of these former outlets are permanently closed , and others may be reopened
now that platinum prices have receded to pre-war levels , but despite the general
expansion of industrial and scientific activity since 1913 the demand for platinum
outside the jewelry trade has suffered a net decline . Since the metallurgy
of platinum is relatively simple the reason for its high price is its relative
scarcity in the earth's crust . An interesting speculation set forth by certain
geologists attributes the extraordinarily high density of the interior of the
earth in part to the presence of iron alloyed with substantial amounts of platinum
and other related metals . In support of this hypothesis it may be said
that platinum is often found in meteorites , and known deposits in the earth's
crust are all of deep - seated origin . However , even if there were a high concentration
of platinum in the interior of the earth it would be next to impossible
at the present state of our knowledge to make it available , and the world would
continue to depend for its supply on deposits found within minable depths below
the surface .
For many years before 1914 the world obtained its supply of platinum
metals primarily from Russia , which before the war produced as much as 300,000
troy ounces in a year , or approximately 95 per cent of the world output . Despite
fluctuations due to internal political disturbances Colombia managed to account
for 3 to 4 per cent , leaving the rest of the world to furnish the remaining 1
to 2 per cent .
Citation
APA:
(1931) IC 6389 PlatinumMLA: IC 6389 Platinum. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.