Urbain developed new and more efficient techniques for the separation of rare earths. By taking advantage of the weights of rare earths, he was able to design procedures to separate light from heavy fractions, using
magnesium and
bismuth nitrates. This enabled him to test and refute a number of inaccurate rare earth "discoveries" claimed by other scientists. Urbain discovered the element
lutetium (atomic number 71) independently in 1907 when he demonstrated that
Jean Charles Galissard de Marignacs
ytterbia contained two substances. Through spectral analysis of both, he was able to characterize them and prove that they were distinct elements. Urbain called his two components "neoytterbia" and "lutecia". and the American chemist
Charles James. Urbain and Welsbach accused each other of publishing results based on the other party. The dispute was officially settled in 1909 by the Commission on Atomic Mass, which granted priority to Urbain as the first to describe the separation of lutetium from ytterbium. Urbain's "lutecia" was adapted to "lutetium". Urbain's name "neoytterbium" was temporarily adopted, but later Marignac's name was restored to the element
ytterbium. In 1911 Urbain isolated another new element which he called "celtium", but his studies were interrupted by
World War I. In 1922, he announced his new element, fully characterizing its emission spectrum, but mistakenly identifying it as a
rare earth.
George de Hevesy and
Dirk Coster also characterized it, placing it more accurately, and called it "hafnium". A decades-long controversy over credit and naming was eventually decided in favor of
hafnium. As of 1919, Urbain had completed an extensive study of phosphorescence spectra, and demonstrated that trace impurities could dramatically alter results. By introducing impurities into artificially prepared mixtures, he was able to duplicate the results reported by other researchers, again testing claims about possible new elements. Urbain was also a composer and sculptor. His son was the hydrologist and climatologist . ==References==