Molybdenum Stocks List

Molybdenum Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 5 CVX Update: Market Chatter: Chevron Furloughs Workers at Idled German Biofuels Plant
Jul 5 CVX Chevron Puts Workers on Furlough at Idled German Biofuels Plant
Jul 5 CVX Namibia Emerges as a New Frontier for Global Oil Giants
Jul 5 CVX Hurricane Beryl Causes Oil Giants to Evacuate Gulf of Mexico Platforms
Jul 5 CVX The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights Chevron, Petrobras and TotalEnergies
Jul 4 CVX Here's Why Hold Strategy is Apt for Valero (VLO) Stock Now
Jul 4 CVX With 67% institutional ownership, Chevron Corporation (NYSE:CVX) is a favorite amongst the big guns
Jul 4 CVX Forget Chevron? Buffett Is Buying Up This Energy Stock Instead
Jul 4 CVX Chevron (CVX), QazaqGaz Sign a Gas Exploration Agreement
Jul 3 CVX Chevron Corporation (CVX): Why Are Analysts Bullish on This Dividend Aristocrat Right Now?
Jul 3 CVX Chevron, Energy Transfer among Mizuho’s top energy picks for July
Jul 3 CVX Global Oil Firms Bet Big on Namibia Discovery Amid Energy Shift
Jul 3 CVX Chevron (CVX) Stock Barely Moves in a Month: An Opportunity?
Jul 3 CVX Ride the Crude Rally With These 3 Promising Energy Stocks
Jul 3 CVX Dispute Over $53B Chevron-Hess Merger Heats Up, Arbitration Panel Nears Formation: Report
Jul 2 CVX The Supreme Court’s Judicial Earthquake Will Shake the Administrative State
Jul 2 CVX Exxon and Chevron Are Among the Safest Dividend Stocks. Check These Out, Too.
Jul 2 CVX Column: With its 'Chevron' ruling, the Supreme Court shows that it thinks it's smarter than scientific experts
Jul 2 CVX What the Chevron decision might mean for FDA’s nutrition policy agenda
Jul 2 CVX Supreme Court’s Chevron, Corner Post decisions could delay energy investments, spur litigation: analysts
Molybdenum

Molybdenum is a chemical element with symbol Mo and atomic number 42. The name is from Neo-Latin molybdaenum, from Ancient Greek Μόλυβδος molybdos, meaning lead, since its ores were confused with lead ores. Molybdenum minerals have been known throughout history, but the element was discovered (in the sense of differentiating it as a new entity from the mineral salts of other metals) in 1778 by Carl Wilhelm Scheele. The metal was first isolated in 1781 by Peter Jacob Hjelm.Molybdenum does not occur naturally as a free metal on Earth; it is found only in various oxidation states in minerals. The free element, a silvery metal with a gray cast, has the sixth-highest melting point of any element. It readily forms hard, stable carbides in alloys, and for this reason most of world production of the element (about 80%) is used in steel alloys, including high-strength alloys and superalloys.
Most molybdenum compounds have low solubility in water, but when molybdenum-bearing minerals contact oxygen and water, the resulting molybdate ion MoO2−4 is quite soluble. Industrially, molybdenum compounds (about 14% of world production of the element) are used in high-pressure and high-temperature applications as pigments and catalysts.
Molybdenum-bearing enzymes are by far the most common bacterial catalysts for breaking the chemical bond in atmospheric molecular nitrogen in the process of biological nitrogen fixation. At least 50 molybdenum enzymes are now known in bacteria, plants, and animals, although only bacterial and cyanobacterial enzymes are involved in nitrogen fixation. These nitrogenases contain molybdenum in a form different from other molybdenum enzymes, which all contain fully oxidized molybdenum in a molybdenum cofactor. These various molybdenum cofactor enzymes are vital to the organisms, and molybdenum is an essential element for life in all higher eukaryote organisms, though not in all bacteria.

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