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
Oct 1 AA Alcoa, Steel Dynamics raised to Buy in joining favorite commodity stocks at BofA
Oct 1 VHI Three Undiscovered Gems In The United States With Promising Potential
Oct 1 CRS Air Products Completes Sale of LNG Business to Honeywell for $1.81B
Oct 1 CRS Ingevity to Launch Capa HS at the 2024 Polyurethanes Conference
Oct 1 HWM Nvidia Is No Longer The Top S&P 500 Stock In 2024. Meet The New King.
Oct 1 ATI ATI Announces Webcast for Third Quarter 2024 Results
Oct 1 VHI 3 Undiscovered Gems in the United States with Strong Potential
Sep 30 RIO Rio Tinto's Share Price Increases 10% in a Week: How to Play It?
Sep 30 VHI Undiscovered Gems In United States For September 2024
Sep 30 CRS Here's Why Carpenter Technology (CRS) is a Strong Momentum Stock
Sep 30 CRS How to Find Strong Basic Materials Stocks Slated for Positive Earnings Surprises
Sep 30 CRS Here’s Why Carpenter Technology Corporation (CRS) Rose in Q2
Sep 30 CRS Avient Stock Scales Fresh 52-week High: What's Driving It?
Sep 30 VHI Three Undiscovered Gems In The United States With Strong Fundamentals
Sep 30 CRS DuPont Unveils Water Solutions Navigator to Assess Sustainability
Sep 30 RIO This $2.4 Billion Lithium Mine Is Caught Between Russia and the West
Sep 29 RIO Rio Tinto: China Economic Bazooka Delays The Inevitable For Base Metals
Sep 27 CRS Carpenter Technology Stock More Than Doubled in a Year
Sep 27 CRS Fission Uranium Awaits Court Decision on Acquisition by Paladin Energy
Sep 27 HWM AECOM Wins Contract to Support LA Metro's ZEB Transition
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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