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General information about Helium |
| Helium |
| He |
| 2 |
| Noble gases |
| 18 |
| 1 |
| s |
| colorless gas |
| 4.002602(2) g·mol-1 |
| 1S2 |
| 2 |
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Physical properties of Helium |
| gas |
| (0°C, 101.325 kPa)
0.1786 g/L |
| 0.95(K), -272.20°C, -457.96°F |
| 4.22(K), -268.93°C, -452.07°F |
| ? kPa |
| 5.19(K), 0.227 MPa |
| 0.0138 kJ·mol-1 |
| 0.0829 kJ·mol-1 |
| (H2)
20.786 J·mol-1·K-1 |
| ? |
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Atomic structure of Helium |
| 0.49 Å |
| ? cm³/mol |
| 0.93 Å |
| 0.007 |
| Hexagonal |
| 93 |
| 1S2 |
| 2 |
| 2 |
| 2 |
| 0 |
| 1S2 |
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Electron dot
model |
Other languages |
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| Latin: |
Helium |
| Czech: |
Helium |
| Croatian: |
Helij |
| French: |
Hélium |
| German: |
Helium - s |
| Italian: |
Elio |
| Norwegian: |
Helium |
| Portuguese: |
Hélio |
| Spanish: |
Helio |
| Swedish: |
Helium |
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| Element |
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Brief description |
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Helium is a very light, inert, colorless gas. Helium has the lowest melting point of any element. It is the only liquid that cannot be solidified by lowering the temperature. It remains liquid down to absolute zero at ordinary pressures, but can be solidified by increasing the pressure. The specific heat of helium gas is unusually high. The density of helium vapor at the normal boiling point is also very high, with the vapor expanding greatly when heated to room temperature. Although helium normally has a valence of zero, it has a weak tendency to combine with certain other elements.
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Uses of Helium |
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Helium is widely used in cryogenic research because its boiling point is near absolute zero. It is used in the study of superconductivity, as an inert gas shield for arc welding, as a protective gas in growing silicon and germanium crystals and producing titanium and zirconium, for pressuring liquid fuel rockets, for use in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as a cooling medium for nuclear reactors, and as a gas for supersonic wind tunnels. A mixture of helium and oxygen is used as an artificial atmosphere for divers and others working under pressure. Helium is used for filling balloons and blimps.
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Hystory of Helium |
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- Discoverer: Piere Janssen
- Discovery Location: France
- Discovery Year: 1868
- Name Origin: Greek: helios, sun
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