Titanium Stocks List

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

Titanium Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Apr 23 CC Stepan Co. (SCL) Expected to Beat Earnings Estimates: Can the Stock Move Higher?
Apr 23 ATI Allegheny Technologies (ATI) Expected to Beat Earnings Estimates: Can the Stock Move Higher?
Apr 23 ATEC When Should You Buy Alphatec Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ:ATEC)?
Apr 22 AA Alcoa raised at Morgan Stanley on cost saving measures
Apr 22 AA Alcoa Stock Rises. It Still Isn’t a Buy.
Apr 19 AA Alcoa Corporation (NYSE:AA) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Apr 19 AA Alcoa Corporation Faces Major Operational Headwinds Into The End Of FY24
Apr 19 CC Chemours Shapes the Future Through STEM Education
Apr 19 AA Alcoa First Quarter 2024 Earnings: Revenues Beat Expectations, EPS Lags
Apr 18 AA Alcoa Reports Q1 Results; Newmont's 2023 Sustainability Report; Foremost Lithium To Attend Planet MicroCap Showcase And More: Thursday's Top Mining Stories
Apr 18 ATI Here's How Much You Would Have Made Owning ATI Stock In The Last 5 Years
Apr 18 AA Alcoa Sees Better Pricing for Aluminum After Russian Ban
Apr 18 AA Alcoa moves up despite EPS miss as company sees improving markets
Apr 18 AA Stocks to Watch Thursday: TSMC, Netflix, Nvidia, Tesla
Apr 18 CC Analysts Estimate Chemours (CC) to Report a Decline in Earnings: What to Look Out for
Apr 18 AA Q1 2024 Alcoa Corp Earnings Call
Apr 18 CRS CF Industries (CF), JERA Execute Joint Development Agreement
Apr 18 CRS Three Days Left Until Carpenter Technology Corporation (NYSE:CRS) Trades Ex-Dividend
Apr 18 AA Alcoa Corp (AA) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript Highlights: Navigating Market Dynamics and ...
Apr 18 AA D.R. Horton, Netflix And 3 Stocks To Watch Heading Into Thursday
Titanium

Titanium is a chemical element with symbol Ti and atomic number 22. It is a lustrous transition metal with a silver color, low density, and high strength. Titanium is resistant to corrosion in sea water, aqua regia, and chlorine.
Titanium was discovered in Cornwall, Great Britain, by William Gregor in 1791, and was named by Martin Heinrich Klaproth after the Titans of Greek mythology. The element occurs within a number of mineral deposits, principally rutile and ilmenite, which are widely distributed in the Earth's crust and lithosphere, and it is found in almost all living things, water bodies, rocks, and soils. The metal is extracted from its principal mineral ores by the Kroll and Hunter processes. The most common compound, titanium dioxide, is a popular photocatalyst and is used in the manufacture of white pigments. Other compounds include titanium tetrachloride (TiCl4), a component of smoke screens and catalysts; and titanium trichloride (TiCl3), which is used as a catalyst in the production of polypropylene.Titanium can be alloyed with iron, aluminium, vanadium, and molybdenum, among other elements, to produce strong, lightweight alloys for aerospace (jet engines, missiles, and spacecraft), military, industrial processes (chemicals and petrochemicals, desalination plants, pulp, and paper), automotive, agri-food, medical prostheses, orthopedic implants, dental and endodontic instruments and files, dental implants, sporting goods, jewelry, mobile phones, and other applications.The two most useful properties of the metal are corrosion resistance and strength-to-density ratio, the highest of any metallic element. In its unalloyed condition, titanium is as strong as some steels, but less dense. There are two allotropic forms and five naturally occurring isotopes of this element, 46Ti through 50Ti, with 48Ti being the most abundant (73.8%). Although they have the same number of valence electrons and are in the same group in the periodic table, titanium and zirconium differ in many chemical and physical properties.

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