Cobalt is a hard, lustrous, grey metal with a high melting point (1493°C). Cobalt is used mainly in production of chemicals (58 percent), super alloys for gas turbine blades and jet aircraft engines, special steel, carbides, diamond tools and magnets.more...
ATI's nickel & cobalt-based alloys and superalloys are used in jet engines, gas turbines, chemical processing, petroleum refining, marine, electronics and other applications where common stainless steels may not provide adequate performance.more...
Cobalt is a chemical element with symbol Co and atomic number 27. Like nickel, cobalt is found in the Earth's crust only in chemically combined form, save for small deposits found in alloys of natural meteoric iron. The free element, produced by reductive smelting, is a hard, lusmore...
Electron Energy Corporation’s samarium cobalt magnets (SmCo) have been the preferred material of choice since pioneering SmCo production in the 1970s. Because EEC controls every step of the material production from melting of the alloy to machining, we can deliver the highest pmore...
An ideal material in high temperature applications, this alloy has the capability of operating in conditions that are up to 550°C and above, with excellent corrosion resistance. However, they offer lower energy levels (Br), are moderately expensive, and not ideal for machining dmore...
The original “rare earth” magnet material, Samarium Cobalt (SmCo) has been commercially available for more than three decades. While it has been replaced in many projects by newer materials, SmCo continues to perform in applications where no other materials can provide the remore...
Samarium Cobalt provides another Rare Earth Class magnet with properties similar to Neodymium. Although the force potential of these magnets is less, they are significantly more resistant to elevated temperatures. The higher cost and lower energy potential of these magnets typicamore...
Samarium cobalt is a rare earth material made by a powder metallurgical process. Manufactured using binders such as epoxy, samarium cobalt magnets are inherently very brittle. Users are discouraged from grinding material because dry remnants are a fire hazard. Some of the advantamore...
Contains liquid cobalt in a solution of act ® to support vital biochemical reactions in the plant. Cobalt is required for nitrogen fixation in the root nodules of leguminous crops. A deficiency will result in nitrogen deficiency symptoms such as reduced protein content and poor more...
Usually found in mineral ores, cobalt is somewhat abundant in Earth’s crust. With, a bluish-white, brittle, hard texture it’s easy to spot. Most produced cobalt is used in combination with other metals to give them certain qualities. Commonly combined with chromium and molybdmore...