Question:
What is the element Selenium used for?
Tisha The GAME Masta
2008-11-15 17:32:16 UTC
I have Sciene report and i need to what is Selenium used for and if you guys can, can someone help come up with a cacthy slogan for Selenium as if it was a product and the slogan was for advertising.
Three answers:
Bob
2008-11-15 18:48:27 UTC
Selenium is both highly toxic and at the same time a mineral needed for proper metabolism. It is used in a variety of chemical processes. One of its most well known and most valuable uses (besides being used for mineral supplements) is in the electronics industry. Here are some links:



http://dietary-supplements.info.nih.gov/factsheets/selenium.asp



http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/tfacts92.html



http://www.asarco.com/seltel_selenium.html



http://www.chemistryexplained.com/elements/P-T/Selenium.html



I guess that it is interesting that it is a deadly poison and a needed trace mineral at the same time. Sometimes it is said -- "the dose alone makes the poison" -- Selenium is a good example of that.
Dan R
2008-11-16 01:42:21 UTC
Selenium (Greek σελήνη selene meaning "Moon") was discovered in 1817 by Jöns Jakob Berzelius who found the element associated with tellurium (named for the Earth).



Growth in selenium consumption was historically driven by steady development of new uses, including applications in rubber compounding, steel alloying, and selenium rectifiers. Selenium is also an essential material in the drums of laser printers and copiers. By 1970, selenium in rectifiers had largely been replaced by silicon, but its use as a photoconductor in plain paper copiers had become its leading application. During the 1980s, the photoconductor application declined (although it was still a large end-use) as more and more copiers using organic photoconductors were produced. Presently, the largest use of selenium worldwide is in glass manufacturing, followed by uses in chemicals and pigments. Electronic use, despite a number of continued applications, continues to decline.[4]



In 1996, continuing research showed a positive correlation between selenium supplementation and cancer prevention in humans, but widespread direct application of this important finding would not add significantly to demand owing to the small doses required. In the late 1990s, the use of selenium (usually with bismuth) as an additive to plumbing brasses to meet no-lead environmental standards, became important. At present, total world selenium production continues to increase modestly.
2008-11-16 01:39:10 UTC
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