chapter 14: metals Flashcards
why are pure metals not used in industry?
- pure metals are soft
> in pure metal, atoms are packed regularly in layers
> layers of atoms can slide over one another easily when a force is applied
* metal atoms of the same size - pure metals may react with air and water and wear away or corrode easily
what are alloys?
- a mixture of a metal with one or few other elements
why are metals often used in the form of alloys?
- they are stronger and do not wear away easily
used for the following purpose:
- to make harder and stronger metals
> brass ( an alloy of zinc and copper) harder than pure copper or pure zinc
2.to improve the appearance of metals
- to lower melting points of metals
>solder ( alloy of tin and lead) lower melting point than most metals
> used to join electronic parts to circuit boards - to make metals more resistant to corrosion
> cupronickel ( alloy of copper and nickel)
> used in coins cuz does not corrode easily
why are alloys stronger and harder than their constituent metals?
- in alloys, atoms of different metals or elements
> are different sizes which disrupts the regular arrangement of atoms in a pure metal - the atoms of different sizes cannot slide over each other easily when a force is applied
> alloy is stronger and harder than pure metal
metal reactivity series
K: potassium
Na: sodium
Ca: calcium
Mg: magnesium
[C]
Zn: zinc
Fe: iron
Pb: lead
[H]
Cu: copper
Ag: silver
Au: gold
what are displacement reactions of acids and what are some examples?
- a more reactive metal can displace a less reactive metal from its salt solution
- eg: when iron fillings added to solution of copper(II) sulfate
>copper is precipitated out of the solution as a pink or reddish brown solid
> the solution turns green - the iron has displaced copper from the copper (II) sulfate solution
iron + copper(II) sulfate > iron(III) sulfate + copper
what is the reaction between a metal an the oxide of another metal?
- a more reactive metal can reduce the oxide of a less reactive metal
- zinc + copper (II) oxide > zinc oxide + copper
what is the reaction of metal and cold water?
+ which metals react with cold water?
- potassium
- sodium
- calcium
- magnesium
metal + water > metal hydroxide + hydrogen
- a more reactive metal reacts more violently with cold water
what is the reaction of metal and steam?
+ which metals react with cold water?
- potassium
- sodium
- calcium
- magnesium
- zebra
- iron
metal + steam > metal oxide + hydrogen
- a more reactive metal reacts more violently with steam
what is the reaction of metals with dilute hydrochloric acid?
- metals react with dilute acids to produce salt and hydrogen
metal + dilute HCl > metal chloride and hydrogen
reduction of metal oxides with carbon.
- metal oxide + carbon»_space;(heat)» metal + carbon dioxide
- the more reactive a metal is, the more difficult it is to reduce its oxide to the metal by carbon
what is the importance of reduction of metal oxides with carbon in the industry?
- metals need to be extracted from their ores ( which are naturally-occurring compounds)
> ores are mainly made of metal oxides
in the industry,
- metals that are below magnesium in the reactivity series are often extracted by reduction with carbon
- the metal oxides above zinc in the reactivity series are often not reduced by carbon
> oxides are very stable and are usually reduced by passing electricity through them
reduction of metal oxides with hydrogen
- metal oxide + hydrogen > metal and steam
- the more reactive a metal is, the more difficult it is to reduce its oxide to the metal by hydrogen
what is the action of heat on metal carbonates?
- the more reactive a metal is, the more difficult it is to decompose its carbonate by heat
- sodium and potassium are higher up the reactivity series
> carbonates are very stable to heat - the carbonates of metals below sodium in the reactivity series decompose to form the oxides of the metals and carbon dioxide
- for silver carbonate, the silver oxide produced is thermally unstable
> further decomposes to form silver
which metals are extracted by electrolysis and why?
- potassium
- sodium
- calcium
-magnesium
> these metals are reactive
compounds are very difficult to be broken down
metals can only be extracted using electricity called electrolysis