Indium (In)
post-transition-metalSolid
Standard Atomic Weight
114.818 uElectron configuration
[Kr] 5s2 4d10 5p1Melting point
156.6 °C (429.75 K)Boiling point
2071.85 °C (2345 K)Density
7310 kg/m³Oxidation states
−5, −2, −1, 0, +1, +2, +3Electronegativity (Pauling)
1.78Ionization energy (1st)
Discovery year
1863Atomic radius
155 pmDetails
Indium is a soft, silvery post-transition metal in group 13. It is chemically related to gallium and thallium, but its stable chemistry is dominated by the +3 oxidation state, with +1 compounds also known. The element is rare in Earth's crust and is obtained chiefly as a by-product of zinc refining. Its technological importance is disproportionate to its abundance, especially because transparent conducting indium tin oxide is central to flat-panel displays, touch screens, and other optoelectronic devices.
Indium is available in ultra pure form. Indium is a very soft, silvery-white metal with a brilliant luster. The pure metal gives a high-pitched "cry" when bent. It wets glass, as does gallium.
The name derives from the term "indigo" for the indigo-blue line in the element's spark spectrum. It was discovered in 1863 by the German physicist Ferdinand Reich and the German metallurgist Hieronymus Theodor Richter, while examining zinc blende. They isolated indium in 1867.
Indium was discovered by the German chemists Ferdinand Reich and Hieronymus Theodor Richter in 1863. Reich and Richter had been looking for traces of the element thallium in samples of zinc ores. A brilliant indigo line in the sample's spectrum revealed the existence of indium. Indium is about as abundant as silver but is much easier to recover since it typically occurs along with zinc, iron, lead and copper ores.
From the brilliant indigo line in its spectrum. Discovered by Reich and Richter, who later isolated the metal. Until 1924, a gram or so constituted the world's supply of this element in isolated form. It is probably about as abundant as silver. About 4 million troy ounces of indium are now produced annually in the Free World. Canada is presently producing more than 1,000,000 troy ounces annually.
Images
Properties
Physical
Chemical
Thermodynamic
Nuclear
Abundance
Reactivity
N/A
Crystal Structure
Electronic Structure
Identifiers
Electron Configuration Measured
In: 4d¹⁰ 5s² 5p¹[Kr] 4d¹⁰ 5s² 5p¹1s² 2s² 2p⁶ 3s² 3p⁶ 3d¹⁰ 4s² 4p⁶ 4d¹⁰ 5s² 5p¹Atomic model
Isotopes change neutron count, mass, and stability — not the electron configuration of a neutral atom.
Schematic atomic model, not to scale.
Atomic Fingerprint
Emission / Absorption Spectrum
Isotope Distribution
| Mass number | Atomic mass (u) | Natural abundance | Half-life |
|---|---|---|---|
| 113 Stable | 112.90406184 ± 0.00000091 | 4.2900% | Stable |
Phase / State
Reason: 131.6 °C below melting point (156.6 °C)
Schematic, not to scale
Phase transition points
Transition energies
Energy required to melt 1 mol at melting point
Energy required to vaporize 1 mol at boiling point
Energy required to sublime 1 mol at sublimation point
Density
At standard conditions
At standard conditions
Advanced
Atomic Spectra
Showing 10 of 49 Atomic Spectra. Sorted by ion charge (ascending).
Lines Holdings ?
| Ion | Charge | Total lines | Transition probabilities | Level designations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| In I | 0 | 92 | 27 | 91 |
| In II | +1 | 899 | 528 | 899 |
| In III | +2 | 55 | 0 | 0 |
| In IV | +3 | 42 | 0 | 0 |
| In V | +4 | 38 | 0 | 0 |
Levels Holdings ?
| Ion | Charge | Levels |
|---|---|---|
| In I | 0 | 114 |
| In II | +1 | 195 |
| In III | +2 | 28 |
| In IV | +3 | 18 |
| In V | +4 | 42 |
| In VI | +5 | 2 |
| In VII | +6 | 2 |
| In VIII | +7 | 2 |
| In IX | +8 | 2 |
| In X | +9 | 2 |
Crystal structure data not available
Crystal structure: tetragonal
Ionic Radii
| Charge | Coordination | Spin | Radius |
|---|---|---|---|
| +3 | 4 | N/A | 62 pm |
| +3 | 6 | N/A | 80 pm |
| +3 | 8 | N/A | 92 pm |
Compounds
Isotopes (1)
| Mass number | Atomic mass (u) | Natural abundance | Half-life | Decay mode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 113 Stable | 112.90406184 ± 0.00000091 | 4.2900% ± 0.0500% | Stable | stable |
Spectral Lines
Showing 50 of 277 Spectral Lines. Only spectral lines with measured intensity are shown by default.
| Wavelength (nm) | Intensity | Ion stage | Type | Transition | Accuracy | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 383.46308 nm | 32000 | In II | emission | 5s.5d 1D → 5s.4f 1F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 451.12972 nm | 18000 | In I | emission | 5s2.5p 2P* → 5s2.6s 2S | Measured | NIST | |
| 410.17504 nm | 17000 | In I | emission | 5s2.5p 2P* → 5s2.6s 2S | Measured | NIST | |
| 468.1115 nm | 16000 | In II | emission | 5s.5d 3D → 5s.4f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 590.33916 nm | 9000 | In II | emission | 5s.6p 3P* → 5s.6d 3D | Measured | NIST | |
| 463.8162 nm | 8800 | In II | emission | 5s.5d 3D → 5s.4f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 465.562 nm | 7800 | In II | emission | 5s.5d 3D → 5s.4f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 464.4572 nm | 5900 | In II | emission | 5s.5d 3D → 5s.4f 1F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 718.29048 nm | 5800 | In II | emission | 5s.6s 3S → 5s.6p 3P* | Measured | NIST | |
| 384.2918 nm | 5600 | In II | emission | 5s.5d 1D → 5s.4f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 591.87693 nm | 5100 | In II | emission | 5s.6p 1P* → 5s.6d 1D | Measured | NIST | |
| 616.254 nm | 4100 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 1F* → 5s<1/2,F=4>.6g | Measured | NIST | |
| 689.15826 nm | 3900 | In II | emission | 5s.6s 3S → 5s.6p 3P* | Measured | NIST | |
| 585.31709 nm | 3400 | In II | emission | 5s.6p 3P* → 5s.6d 3D | Measured | NIST | |
| 609.59333 nm | 3300 | In II | emission | 5s.6p 3P* → 5s.6d 3D | Measured | NIST | |
| 468.4791 nm | 2500 | In II | emission | 5s.5d 3D → 5s.4f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 727.66388 nm | 2400 | In II | emission | 5s.6s 3S → 5s.6p 3P* | Measured | NIST | |
| 614.953 nm | 2200 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=4>.6g | Measured | NIST | |
| 613.986 nm | 2100 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=5>.6g | Measured | NIST | |
| 614.32 nm | 2100 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=4>.6g | Measured | NIST | |
| 614.813 nm | 2100 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=5>.6g | Measured | NIST | |
| 616.113 nm | 2000 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 1F* → 5s<1/2,F=5>.6g | Measured | NIST | |
| 465.6736 nm | 1700 | In II | emission | 5s.5d 3D → 5s.4f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 551.3006 nm | 1500 | In II | emission | 5p2 3P → 5s.4f 1F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 614.126 nm | 1500 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=4>.6g | Measured | NIST | |
| 405.69377 nm | 1300 | In II | emission | 5s.6p 3P* → 5s.8s 3S | Measured | NIST | |
| 591.52626 nm | 1300 | In II | emission | 5s.6p 3P* → 5s.6d 3D | Measured | NIST | |
| 557.6866 nm | 1200 | In II | emission | 5s.7p 1P* → 5s.10d 1D | Measured | NIST | |
| 551.935 nm | 1100 | In II | emission | 5s.6d 3D → 5s.7f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 549.7486 nm | 1000 | In II | emission | 5s.6d 3D → 5s.7f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 550.7048 nm | 1000 | In II | emission | 5s.6d 3D → 5s.7f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 551.0883 nm | 1000 | In II | emission | 5s.7p 3P* → 5s.10d 3D | Measured | NIST | |
| 512.0847 nm | 960 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=5>.7g | Measured | NIST | |
| 390.20794 nm | 910 | In II | emission | 5s.6p 1P* → 5s.7d 1D | Measured | NIST | |
| 384.2158 nm | 900 | In II | emission | 5s.5d 1D → 5s.4f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 512.1781 nm | 880 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=4>.7g | Measured | NIST | |
| 611.58707 nm | 830 | In II | emission | 5s.6p 3P* → 5s.6d 3D | Measured | NIST | |
| 511.7388 nm | 810 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=4>.7g | Measured | NIST | |
| 511.5109 nm | 800 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=5>.7g | Measured | NIST | |
| 512.9865 nm | 710 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 1F* → 5s<1/2,F=5>.7g | Measured | NIST | |
| 463.7055 nm | 610 | In II | emission | 5s.5d 3D → 5s.4f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 511.6041 nm | 590 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=4>.7g | Measured | NIST | |
| 550.7779 nm | 570 | In II | emission | 5s.6d 3D → 5s.7f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 414.9635 nm | 550 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 1F* → 5s<1/2,F=5>.10g | Measured | NIST | |
| 530.94926 nm | 550 | In II | emission | 5s.6p 3P* → 5s.6d 1D | Measured | NIST | |
| 454.8998 nm | 540 | In II | emission | 5p2 1D → 5s.8p 3P* | Measured | NIST | |
| 461.6069 nm | 540 | In II | emission | 5s.4f 3F* → 5s<1/2,F=4>.8g | Measured | NIST | |
| 457.0881 nm | 520 | In II | emission | 5s.6d 3D → 5s.9f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 458.701 nm | 520 | In II | emission | 5s.6d 3D → 5s.9f 3F* | Measured | NIST | |
| 457.1286 nm | 510 | In II | emission | 5s.6d 3D → 5s.9f 3F* | Measured | NIST |
Extended Properties
Covalent Radii (Extended)
Van der Waals Radii
Atomic & Metallic Radii
Numbering Scales
Electronegativity Scales
Polarizability & Dispersion
Miedema Parameters
Supply Risk & Economics
Phase Transitions & Allotropes
| Melting point | 429.75 K |
| Boiling point | 2300.15 K |
| Triple point (temperature) | 429.74 K |
Oxidation State Categories
Advanced Reference Data
Screening Constants (11)
| n | Orbital | σ |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | s | 0.9903 |
| 2 | p | 4.102 |
| 2 | s | 12.8764 |
| 3 | d | 14.3218 |
| 3 | p | 17.4793 |
| 3 | s | 17.3692 |
| 4 | d | 32.0584 |
| 4 | p | 28.6312 |
| 4 | s | 27.2388 |
| 5 | p | 40.53 |
Crystal Radii Detail (3)
| Charge | CN | Spin | rcrystal (pm) | Origin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | IV | 76 | ||
| 3 | VI | 94 | from r^3 vs V plots, | |
| 3 | VIII | 106 | from r^3 vs V plots, calculated, |
Isotope Decay Modes (69)
| Isotope | Mode | Intensity |
|---|---|---|
| 96 | B+ | — |
| 96 | p | — |
| 97 | B+ | 100% |
| 97 | B+p | 2.3% |
| 97 | p | — |
| 98 | B+ | 100% |
| 98 | B+p | 0.1% |
| 99 | B+ | 100% |
| 99 | B+p | 0.3% |
| 100 | B+ | 100% |
X‑ray Scattering Factors (510)
| Energy (eV) | f₁ | f₂ |
|---|---|---|
| 10 | — | 2.16244 |
| 10.1617 | — | 2.07002 |
| 10.3261 | — | 1.98155 |
| 10.4931 | — | 1.89686 |
| 10.6628 | — | 1.81579 |
| 10.8353 | — | 1.72844 |
| 11.0106 | — | 1.54985 |
| 11.1886 | — | 1.35731 |
| 11.3696 | — | 0.99325 |
| 11.5535 | — | 0.74202 |
Additional Data
Estimated Crustal Abundance
The estimated element abundance in the earth's crust.
2.5×10-1 milligrams per kilogram
References (1)
Estimated Oceanic Abundance
The estimated element abundance in the earth's oceans.
2×10-2 milligrams per liter
References (1)
Sources
Sources of this element.
Indium is most frequently associated with zinc materials, and it is from these that most commercial indium is now obtained; however, it is also found in iron, lead, and copper ores.
References (1)
- [6] Indium https://periodic.lanl.gov/49.shtml
References
(9)
Data deposited in or computed by PubChem
The half-life and atomic mass data was provided by the Atomic Mass Data Center at the International Atomic Energy Agency.
Element data are cited from the Atomic weights of the elements (an IUPAC Technical Report). The IUPAC periodic table of elements can be found at https://iupac.org/what-we-do/periodic-table-of-elements/. Additional information can be found within IUPAC publication doi:10.1515/pac-2015-0703 Copyright © 2020 International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.
The information are cited from Pure Appl. Chem. 2018; 90(12): 1833-2092, https://doi.org/10.1515/pac-2015-0703.
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (Jefferson Lab) is one of 17 national laboratories funded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The lab's primary mission is to conduct basic research of the atom's nucleus using the lab's unique particle accelerator, known as the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF). For more information visit https://www.jlab.org/
The periodic table at the LANL (Los Alamos National Laboratory) contains basic element information together with the history, source, properties, use, handling and more. The provenance data may be found from the link under the source name.
The periodic table contains NIST's critically-evaluated data on atomic properties of the elements. The provenance data that include data for atomic spectroscopy, X-ray and gamma ray, radiation dosimetry, nuclear physics, and condensed matter physics may be found from the link under the source name. Ref: https://www.nist.gov/pml/atomic-spectra-database
This section provides all form of data related to element Indium.
The element property data was retrieved from publications.
