Chemical Elements Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Chemical Elements stocks.

Chemical Elements Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 22 UEC Uranium Energy (UEC) Outpaces Stock Market Gains: What You Should Know
Nov 22 KMT Kennametal Stock Exhibits Strong Prospects Despite Headwinds
Nov 22 UUUU Energy Fuels: Misunderstood Today, Set To Shine In 2025 And Beyond
Nov 22 MTRN Intuit Issues Weak Forecast, Joins Reddit And Other Big Stocks Moving Lower In Friday's Pre-Market Session
Nov 22 PLG Platinum Group Metals Ltd. (NYSE American: PLG) (TSX: PTM) Well Positioned in Growing PGM Space Thanks to Flagship Project
Nov 22 MLI S&P 500: Texas Pacific Land Rises On S&P 500 Index Entry
Nov 21 MLI Texas Pacific Land Set to Join S&P 500, Mueller Industries to Join S&P MidCap 400 and Atlas Energy Solutions to Join S&P SmallCap 600
Nov 21 UEC Why Uranium Energy Corp. Rallied This Week
Nov 20 UEC Centrus Stock Declines 10% on TENEX Update: What Does it Mean for Investors?
Nov 20 UUUU Energy Fuels (UUUU) Just Flashed Golden Cross Signal: Do You Buy?
Nov 20 PLG Platinum Group Metals Ltd. (NYSE American: PLG) (TSX: PTM) Focused on Becoming Emerging Leader in PGM Sector
Nov 20 ICL ICL Group: Resilient Performance Suggests Potential Rebound
Nov 20 UEC Resource Wars: China and America Battle for Antimony as Prices Surge 200%
Nov 18 UUUU America’s Shortage Of This Metal Keeps Trump Awake At Night
Nov 18 MTRN Is Materion Corporation (MTRN) the Best Nickel Stock to Invest in?
Nov 17 UUUU Energy Fuels (UUUU)’s Ambitious Expansion: Boosting Uranium Production to Power the Future
Nov 17 UEC Uranium Energy Corp (UEC)’s Strategic Moves: Dominating the U.S. Uranium Market
Chemical Elements

A chemical element is a species of atom having the same number of protons in their atomic nuclei (that is, the same atomic number, or Z). For example, the atomic number of oxygen is 8, so the element oxygen consists of all atoms which have exactly 8 protons.
118 elements have been identified, of which the first 94 occur naturally on Earth with the remaining 24 being synthetic elements. There are 80 elements that have at least one stable isotope and 38 that have exclusively radionuclides, which decay over time into other elements. Iron is the most abundant element (by mass) making up Earth, while oxygen is the most common element in the Earth's crust.Chemical elements constitute all of the ordinary matter of the universe. However astronomical observations suggest that ordinary observable matter makes up only about 15% of the matter in the universe: the remainder is dark matter; the composition of this is unknown, but it is not composed of chemical elements.
The two lightest elements, hydrogen and helium, were mostly formed in the Big Bang and are the most common elements in the universe. The next three elements (lithium, beryllium and boron) were formed mostly by cosmic ray spallation, and are thus rarer than heavier elements. Formation of elements with from 6 to 26 protons occurred and continues to occur in main sequence stars via stellar nucleosynthesis. The high abundance of oxygen, silicon, and iron on Earth reflects their common production in such stars. Elements with greater than 26 protons are formed by supernova nucleosynthesis in supernovae, which, when they explode, blast these elements as supernova remnants far into space, where they may become incorporated into planets when they are formed.The term "element" is used for atoms with a given number of protons (regardless of whether or not they are ionized or chemically bonded, e.g. hydrogen in water) as well as for a pure chemical substance consisting of a single element (e.g. hydrogen gas). For the second meaning, the terms "elementary substance" and "simple substance" have been suggested, but they have not gained much acceptance in English chemical literature, whereas in some other languages their equivalent is widely used (e.g. French corps simple, Russian простое вещество). A single element can form multiple substances differing in their structure; they are called allotropes of the element.
When different elements are chemically combined, with the atoms held together by chemical bonds, they form chemical compounds. Only a minority of elements are found uncombined as relatively pure minerals. Among the more common of such native elements are copper, silver, gold, carbon (as coal, graphite, or diamonds), and sulfur. All but a few of the most inert elements, such as noble gases and noble metals, are usually found on Earth in chemically combined form, as chemical compounds. While about 32 of the chemical elements occur on Earth in native uncombined forms, most of these occur as mixtures. For example, atmospheric air is primarily a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and argon, and native solid elements occur in alloys, such as that of iron and nickel.
The history of the discovery and use of the elements began with primitive human societies that found native elements like carbon, sulfur, copper and gold. Later civilizations extracted elemental copper, tin, lead and iron from their ores by smelting, using charcoal. Alchemists and chemists subsequently identified many more; all of the naturally occurring elements were known by 1950.
The properties of the chemical elements are summarized in the periodic table, which organizes the elements by increasing atomic number into rows ("periods") in which the columns ("groups") share recurring ("periodic") physical and chemical properties. Save for unstable radioactive elements with short half-lives, all of the elements are available industrially, most of them in low degrees of impurities.

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