Manganese in a sentence as a noun

Except that most people get a significant amount of manganese from their water, thus putting them at risk. This is what I said in my post, which you should read before you reply to.

Maybe next deal with the usual suspects of compounds of calcium, iron, and manganese. Next deal with bacteria.

If there was Wikipedia in 1974 it would have told us that the Glomar Explorer was built to mine manganese nodules from the ocean floor.

Yes, there is a company operated rail link specially developed for manganese transportation to the nearest plant. Note: I'm from Georgia.

Using stainless steel is risky due to manganese, which means they're either coated with polycarbonate meaning BPA, or PET. So you've got a stainless steel coated polyethylene liner... kind of redundant.

I spent the last 30 minutes consulting the literature, I can't find any studies that indicating stainless steel leaches manganese. I realize it was mentioned in that atlantic article but they didn't cite any sources.

Org/wiki/Lithium_iron_phosphate_battery Longer lifespan and significantly cheaper than cobalt, manganese, etc; but 20% lower specific mass. Survives having a nail driven through a fully-charged cell with only some smoke and a small bit of flame -- not a meltdown like the more active chemistries.

"nickel, zinc, copper and manganese in high concentrations" are all commercially viable metals worth collecting, assuming the extraction process is cheaper than digging it out of the ground. I haven't been able to find out how long the roots are, or how deep they typically grow

The alloy used in the Land Rover was Birmabright which is 7% magnesium, sometimes 1% manganese and aluminum. [1] Without the maganese this would be a series 5 aluminum according to the alloy grade comparison I found.

They are aware that Calcium blocks the absorption of Iron[1], and that it blocks absorption of manganese, magnesium, zinc, fluoride, and phosphorus. [2] The people making Soylent are testing the mix on themselves first, and having blood tests done regularly to make sure they aren't harming themselves in the long run.

"the component, an emergency locator transmitter powered by lithium-manganese dioxide batteries" So not the same batteries as the last time apparently. I wonder if they made the same "fireproof box enclosure" change to these batteries as they did the others.

Forget the risk of being exposed to manganese within a steel can - we are already actively polluting our households and probably breathing in higher amounts of nasty chemicals hidden in household products than the examples mentioned in the article.

Its "estimated share of world platinum production amounted to 77%; kyanite and other materials, 55%; chromium, 45%; palladium, 39%; vermiculite, 39%; vanadium, 38%; zirconium, 30%; manganese, 21%; rutile, 20%; ilmenite, 19%; gold, 11%;" and so on. But the market is so large and complex that domination of those niches doesn't naturally lead to domination of the entire market by South Africa.

Why are rhenium, rhodium, lanthanum, europium, dysprosium, thulium, ytterbium, yttrium, strontium, thallium, magnesium and manganese so irreplacable? Is it catalytic reactivity, phase transition tempratures, crystal formation tendencies, quirks in solid state semiconductor chemistry?

Manganese definitions

noun

a hard brittle grey polyvalent metallic element that resembles iron but is not magnetic; used in making steel; occurs in many minerals