TOPIC 10 - USING RESOURCES Flashcards
What are ceramics?
Non-metals solids with high melting points that are not made from carbon-based compounds.
Explain ceramics that are made from clay?
Clay is a soft material when dug up, so it can be moulded into different shapes. When it is fired at high temperatures, it hardens to form ceramic. Its ability to be moulded when wet and then hardened makes clay ideal for making pottery and bricks.
Explain glass as a ceramic?
Glass is generally transparent, can be moulded when hot and can be brittle when thin.
Most glass made is soda-lime glass, which is made by heating a mixture of limestone, sand and sodium carbonate until it melts. When the mixture cools it comes out as glass.
Borosilicate glass has a higher melting point than soda-lime glass. It is made in the same way as soda-lime glass, using a mixture of sand and boron trioxide.
What are composites?
Composites are made of one material embedded in another. Fibres and fragments of a material (known as reinforcements) are surrounded by a matrix acting as a binder. The properties of a composite depend on the properties of the materials it is made from.
What are fibreglass?
Fibreglass consists of fibres of glass embedded in a matrix made of polymer (plastic). It has a low density (like plastic) but it is very strong (like glass). It is used for things like skis, boats and surfboards.
What is carbon fibre?
Carbon fibre composites also have a polymer matrix. The reinforcements is either made from long chains of carbon atoms bonded together (carbon fibres) or from carbon nanotubes. These composites are very strong and light so are used in aerospace and sports car manufacturing.
What is concrete?
Made from aggregrate (a mixture of sand and gravel) embedded in cement. It is very strong. This makes it ideal for use as a building material e.g. in skate parks.
What is wood?
A natural composite of cellulose fibres held together by an organic polymer matrix.
What are low density polymers?
Low density poly(ethene) is made from ethene at a moderate temperature under high pressure and with a catalyst. It is flexible and used for bags and bottles.
What are high density polymers?
High density poly(ethene) is also made from ethene but at a lower temperature and pressure with with a different catalyst. It is more rigid and is used for water tanks and drainpipes.
What are thermosoftening polymers?
Contain individual polymer chains entwined together with weak forces between the chains. You can melt these plastics and remould them.
What is thermosetting polymers?
Contain monomers that can form cross-links between the polymer chains, holding the chains together in a solid structure. Unlike thermosoftening polymers, these polymers do not soften when heated. They are strong, hard and rigid.
What are the properties of ceramics?
Insulators of heat and electricity.
Brittle (they aren’y very flexible and break easily)
Stiff.
What are the properties of polymers?
Insulators of heat and electricty.
They can be flexible
Easy moulded.
Many applications including in clothing, insulators and in electrical items.
What are the properties of composites?
Depend on the matrix/binder and the reinforcement used to make them so they have many different uses.
What are the properties of metals?
Malleable, good conductors of heat and electricity, ductile (they can be drawn into wires), shiny and stiff. Metals have many uses including in electrical wires, car body-work, and cutlery.
What are alloys?
Made by adding another element to the metal. This disrupts the structure of the metal, making it harder than pure metals.
Give examples of some alloys?
Bronze = copper and tin
Brass = copper and zinc
Gold alloys are used to make jewllery.
Alluminium alloys are used to make aircraft.
What is corrosion?
Where metals react with substances in their environment and are gradually destroyed. Iron corrodes easily, it rusts.
Corrosion only happens on the surface of a material where it is exposed to air.
What does iron need ti rust?
Iron needs contact with both oxygen and water.
What is the formula for rust?
iron + oxygen + water = hydrated iron (III) oxide.
Why will all the iron in an object eventually corode away?
Rust is a soft and crumbly solid which flakes off to leave more iron available to rust again. This means that, eventually, all the iron in an object corrodes away even if it wasn’t initially at the surface.
What is aluminium oxide?
Aluminium also corrodes when exposed to air. The aluminium oxide that forms when aluminium corrodes does not flake away. It forms a nice, protective layer that sticks firmly to the aluminium and stop any further reaction taking place.
What methods can be used to prevent rusting?
Painting/coating with plastic
Electroplating
Oiling/greasing
What is electroplating?
A way of preventing rusting. It uses electrolysis to reduce metal ions onto an iron electrode. It can be used to coat the iron with a layer of different metal that will not be corroded away.