COMMON ELEMENTS ALPHABETICALLY
Chemtutor's fifty-or-so most useful
elements to know
About the elements
ABOUT THE ELEMENTS
There are only a few more than one hundred elements. Of those,
only eighty-three are not naturally radioactive, and of
those, only fifty or so are common enough to our experience to be
useful in this course. These elements, though, are going to
stay the same for a long time. You may have memorized the states
and capitals of the United States. The elements will
outlast any political entity. You have certainly memorized and
internalized the English alphabet. The elements will be around
long after the letters of any alphabet are gone. It would serve
you well to know the elements. If you were to attempt to read
anything without knowing your letters, you would be in trouble.
Let's say you still have a hard time telling the difference
between a "b" and a "d."Your fluency in
reading would be ruined by having to look up the difference every
time you encountered one of those letters. Similarly, you should know your
elements well enough so that if you read or hear about
one of them, you instantly know what they are. Learn how to spell
the names of the elements. Learn the symbols. Learn where the common elements are on the periodic table. Some of
the symbols have one letter, some have two, but each element
symbol has one and only one upper case letter in it.
COMMON ELEMENTS
You should know the name and symbol for the following
elements. If you see the name, you should know the symbol. If you
see the symbol, you should know the name. For the elements in the
right-hand row there are other names for the element,
sometimes Latin, from which the element symbol was derived or
some other name that makes the element more
recognizable. You do not need to know the names in
parentheses. Some of the elements in this table were included because they are in a particular group rather than being common themselves, such as the Noble or inert gases. Others were included because they are important to know, such as uranium, polonium, and tungsten.
| Helium He | Lithium Li
| Hydrogen H | Sodium (Natrium)
Na |
| Boron B | Carbon C | Silicon Si | Calcium (Lime) Ca
|
| Beryllium Be | Fluorine F
| Neon Ne | Sulfur (Brimstone)
S |
| Phosphorus P | Nitrogen N
| Aluminum Al | Potassium
(Kalium) K |
| Chlorine Cl | Argon Ar
| Magnesium Mg | Iron (Ferrum)
Fe |
| Bromine Br | Oxygen O | Manganese Mn | Copper (Cuprum) Cu
|
| Cobalt Co | Nickel Ni | Chromium Cr | Lead (Plumbum) Pb
|
| Zinc Zn | Krypton Kr | Rubidium Rb | Silver (Argentum) Ag
|
| Iodine I | Platinum Pt
| Cadmium Cd | Tin (Stannum) Sn
|
| Cesium Cs | Barium Ba | Francium Fr | Antimony(Stibium) Sb
|
| Bismuth Bi | Arsenic
As | Strontium Sr | Tungsten(Wolfram)W |
| Radon Rn | Xenon Xe | Polonium Po | Gold (Aurum)
Au |
| Radium Ra | Uranium U | Mercury (Hydrargyrum or Quicksilver)
Hg |
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The University of Nottingham has the most wonderful Periodic Table of Videos. Don't miss it.
Aluminum, Al.
A very rare metal before the electrolytic process of
producing it was discovered in 1886, Aluminum is a
common metal to us. The melting point is 660 °C, so an aluminum pot can be
melted on a common household stove unless it contains a
lower boiling liquid, such as water. Aluminum's silvery
shine when new changes to a powdery gray in the air that gives it
a protective coating against further oxidation. Aluminum is easily
attacked by acids and bases. It is a good conductor of
electricity, particularly on consideration of its weight. Due to
the ease of the electrolytic process of refining it, aluminum is
so cheap that small amounts of it are considered disposable. It is
used for foil wrapping for foods
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Antimony, Sb. On the Periodic Chart antimony
appears on the line between metals and non-metals. Antimony is more brittle
and less conductive of heat and electricity than most metals.
Antimony is used in alloys, for instance mixing with lead to
harden it. Antimony is also used in flame proofing compounds and
in paints and pottery.
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Argon, Ar. Argon is one of the inert gasses of
Group 8 or 18, the noble gases. It does not combine with other
elements. Argon is collected from the air by fractional
distillation. It is used in the red colored electric fluorescent
tubes popularly called "neon lights."
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Arsenic, As. It has been known for centuries that arsenic
compounds are poisonous. Arsenic is a semi-metal (on the boundary
between metals and non-metals) that is used in hardening metals,
poisons as insecticides, and coloring materials in paints.
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Astatine, At. Astatine is the only halogen
(Group 7 or 17) element that is naturally radioactive. It is the largest of the
group, so the radioactivity is due to the instability of the nucleus.
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Barium, Ba. A Group 2 element, barium as a metal element is about
as soft as lead. Compounds of barium make excellent absorbers of x-ray
radiation, so are used to outline organs in medical radiology.
White barium compounds are used in paints. The name of the element refers to its high density.
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Beryllium, Be. The least dense of the Group 2
elements, beryllium is a very hard, tough metal. Ores of
beryllium are not very plentiful. Its soluble compounds taste
sweet.
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Bismuth, Bi. The element has been known for a
long time, but it was often confused with tin or lead centuries
ago. The pure metal has a slightly pink color to it on top of the
usual metallic silvery shine. For a metal, bismuth has a low
melting point and a low electrical conductivity. It is used in
alloys for sprinkler systems and for metal casting.
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Boron, B. Boron is familiar in its use as
borax, a water softener, and in boric acid, a mild antiseptic. It
is also used in ceramics. Boron is a non-metal element that is
not found free in nature. Much of the mined Boron is found in arid regions in the
form of borax, a hydrated sodium borate compound.
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Bromine, Br. Bromine is a halogen (Group 7 or
17 element). It is one of the few elements liquid at room
temperature. Bromine has a melting point of -7 °C and a
boiling point of 59 °C. A reddish-brown very irritating
poisonous vapor comes from the liquid. The organic compounds of
bromine are very important.
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Cadmium, Cd. Cadmium is a soft bluish metal
that is used in low-melting alloys, high friction-resistant alloys, and
electroplating. Cadmium rods are used in control for atomic fission. Cadmium
sulfide makes a yellow pigment. It is usually mined with lead. For some years it was
difficult to tell the difference between the lead and cadmium. Many cadmium compounds are
poisonous.
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Calcium, Ca. The word "lime" has
been used with calcium compounds for many years. Calcium is a Group 2 element that is
very abundant in the earth's crust in compounds, but never seen
in nature as the free metal element. It is an essential element
for living things, especially in muscles, leaves, bones, teeth, and
shells. Calcium is found in limestone. It is used in Portland
cement, mortar, plaster, and antacids. Lime, Ca(OH)2, is used to mark off playing fields and for
removing acid ("sweetening") from agricultural fields. The element form of calcium, a soft metal,
was not known until the early in the nineteenth century by
electrolysis.
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Carbon, C. There are three common forms of
elemental carbon; carbon black ("soot" or "lamp
black"), graphite, and diamond. More recently, various sizes
of Bucky Balls have been found to be another allotropic form of
carbon. Bucky Balls are geodesic dome-shaped balls of carbon
atoms in discrete patterns named after Buckminster Fuller, the
predictor of such arrangements. Carbon is not known to form ionic
bonds, but only covalent bonds, of which it can make four single
covalent bonds per atom. The four covalent bond arrangement gives
carbon the geometrical capability to make an incredible number of
compounds, called organic compounds, with carbon chains as the "backbone" of a large molecule. One might say that the
bonding of carbon makes possible the existence of living things
as we know them.
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Cesium, Cs. Cesium is a Group 1 element used
in some photoelectric cells and as a catalyst in organic reactions. Cesium salts are
important phosphors (glowing materials) on the front of
phosphorescent color television receivers.
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Chlorine, Cl. Elemental chlorine, Cl2, is a greenish
dense gas that has been used in wartime as a poison gas. It is
found in nature as the chloride, mostly of sodium. (Sodium
chloride is "table salt.") Chloride, the negative ion
of chlorine dissolved in water, is one of the common electrolytes
in living things. Elemental chlorine is released into water for
drinking or swimming to control bacterial and fungal growth.
Chlorine is used in bleaches and organic compounds. Chlorine is a
non-metal element of the halogen group.
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Chromium, Cr. The word "chrome"
connotes "bright and shiny". In fact, chromium is used as an electroplated
cover on many automobiles. Chromium is a metal element in many
ways resembling iron. It is used in alloys, often with iron, to
make harder metals and stainless alloys. The compounds of
chromium have many brilliant varied colors, and so are used as
pigments.
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Copper, Cu. Evidence of copper mining and
smelting goes back over five thousand years into human
prehistory. The metal element is a characteristic golden-red. It
is one of the best conductors of heat and electricity. The best
copper for use in electric wires is the very pure copper that
comes from using electrolysis as a final purification step.
Copper was used in swords before brass and bronze, both alloys of
copper that are harder and hold an edge better. Copper is about
the easiest metal to smelt. Some distinctive blue-green rocks
heated to a reasonable temperature are all the primitive
metallurgist needs to get copper. The most important use we have
for copper at this time is the conduction of electricity, but it is also used for water pipes in some houses for its ease of working
into shape and the bottoms of cooking pans for its good conduction of heat.
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Deuterium, D. Deuterium is not an element,
but one of only two named isotopes, both isotopes of hydrogen. Deuterium is
called "heavy hydrogen" because it has a neutron in the
nucleus along with a single proton.
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Fluorine, F. If you pronounce it "flue
ring" without the "g," it might be easier to remember the unusual
spelling of fluorine. Fluorine is
the least dense, the smallest element number, of the halogen
group, Group 7 or 17. Element fluorine is a pale greenish-yellow
gas that is extremely poisonous and extremely active chemically.
Fluorine is used in hydrofluoric acid to etch glass. Sodium
fluoride (say, "flew ride") in very small
quantities is used in drinking water to prevent dental decay.
Many organic compounds containing fluorine are common useful
materials such as Freon and Teflon.
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Francium, Fr. The largest (highest element
number) Group 1 (alkali metal) element, francium is radioactive. It is the most active
of the alkali metals. It is a natural decay product of actinium.
Francium was included in this group not because it is common (It certainly isn't.), but only because
it is the last one of Group IA, Group 1, or the alkali metals.
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Germanium, Ge. In making the primitive
Periodic Chart, Mendeleev knew to skip a place for an element not yet found. By
extrapolation from the chart, Mendeleev predicted the properties
of Germanium. The melting point of 32 °C permits
Germanium to be melted in a person's hand. Germanium is used
the manufacture of semiconductors.
(The body temperature of a human being is about 37 °C.)
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Gold, Au. Gold is likely the earliest metal
known to humanity because it can be found in its native form and is easier to work
(softer) than copper, which also is found in its native form.
Gold is the least active of the metals. The gold of the ancient
Incas buried many hundreds of years can be unearthed as shiny as
it was when new. Gold is an excellent conductor of heat
and electricity. It is used in electrical circuitry that is
either exposed to weathering or must be reliable for many years.
Gold is the most malleable material. It can be pounded into incredibly
thin sheets. Pure gold is too soft a metal to make swords, but
it is commonly used for jewelry. In the U.S., Most gold jewelry in the US is
14 carat or about 58% gold in the alloy. The distinctive
metallic yellow of gold is known and highly valued throughout the
world.
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Helium, He. The name helium refers to the sun
because it was first detected in spectroscopic lines from sunlight. Helium is the
lightest of the noble gasses, Group 18. Helium is difficult to
acquire by fractional distillation of air because of its low
boiling point, but it is available directly from the ground in helium
wells in Texas, USA. It is used to inflate lighter-than-air
balloons and airships and for artificial atmosphere for deep diving.
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Hydrogen, H. The most famous mental picture
of hydrogen is the burning of the zeppelin Hindenburg. There are
some
who claim that the fire that finished the Hindenburg was lit by the fabric that
contained it rather than the explosive tendencies of the hydrogen
itself, but a lot of hydrogen burned that day.
Hydrogen is the lightest (least dense)
of the elements and the lightest of the gasses. The lift that the
Hindenburg got from the elemental hydrogen in its gas bags
was the best in the world -- with the one small flaw that
hydrogen burns explosively with oxygen to make water.
Airships today use another "lighter-than-air" gas, helium, to
get lift.
Almost all the hydrogen on earth is in the form of
compounds, mostly water. Elemental hydrogen is one of the major components
of stars. Large amounts of elemental hydrogen are used
for fixing nitrogen for fertilizers and for hydrogenation of fats
and oils. Hydrogen is a diatomic gas as an element. It usually
appears at the top of Group 1 on the periodic chart, but hydrogen
is not a member of Group 1. With only one proton,
hydrogen has only one electron in a shell that can only contain
two electrons. Hydrogen can lose one electron to become a
positive ion, as in acid, or it can collect another electron to
produce a hydride (H-) ion with a
full shell. In spite of a marked decrease in research funds,
fusion power from hydrogen isotopes deuterium and/or tritium
seems almost within the grasp of human technology at this writing
(2011). Certainly, with some of the problems with fission nuclear energy
sources, the prospect of getting safer nuclear energy should be welcomed.
There are many people working on the possibility of using hydrogen
as a chemical fuel for vehicles.. The 'hydrogen economy' would require some changes in the
way we do things, but may be the only way we have as our petroleum resources run out.
Here are some references on the use of hydrogen as a fuel.
http://www.utcpower.com/?Google_UTCP_ad&gclid=CK7Q1N7p4akCFSE95QodCUcNYw
http://www2.schneider-electric.com/sites/corporate/en/solutions/energy_efficiency/energy-context.page
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_fuel
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Iodine, I. The element looks like a dark gray
brittle solid at room temperature, but it easily sublimes into a beautiful purple
choking gas. It dissolves in water only slightly, but in alcohol
fairly easily to make a purple solution. Iodine in alcohol
solution is a commonly used antiseptic. Lack of iodine in human beings
causes an enlargement of the thyroid gland called goiter. We
don't see much goiter in our culture because iodized table
salt has a small amount of iodine added to it. Iodine is a
halogen. As a gas it is a diatomic molecule.
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Iron, Fe. Iron is the metal on which our
civilization is built. It is usually not used as the pure element, but as the major
component of a large number of alloys called steel. Carbon is one of the
elements added to iron to make various alloys. In general, the
more carbon in the mixture, the more brittle the iron alloy is.
Pig iron, the material direct from the blast furnace, can be cast
into shapes. The carbon content of pig iron can be about three
percent. Other metals can be added to the iron to make
alloys with much improved properties, such as stainless steel.
Iron is magnetic and a decent conductor of electricity in its
pure form.
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Krypton, Kr. Krypton is an inert gas. As the
other noble gases, it produces a bright line spectrum in
fluorescent tubes. Krypton's light output is a brilliant yellow-green. If you
were a writer of fiction and wanted to describe a mineral with
unlikely properties, you might claim that the mineral would be a
compound of Krypton, since there are none. Krypton was included in this
list because it is one of the Noble elements or inert gases.
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Lead, Pb. With a melting temperature of 327 °C
and a commonly available ore, lead is an easy metal to acquire and shape.
Lead is malleable and fairly soft. Lead salts (ionic compounds with lead) are poisonous.
There is some suspicion that lead contributed to the downfall of
the Roman Empire, particularly the upper classes, due to the use in water pipes and cups for
warming mulled wine. Lead is used in automotive electric batteries,
solder for electronic devices, and pigments. Lead was commonly
used in making the pigments for house paint until the nineteen
fifties. Many older houses now must bear the warning that very
young children should not live in such places until the old paint
is removed for fear of lead poisoning.
The Latin name for lead is plumbum. This accounts for
the symbol of Pb for lead and the names of plumb bob for a weighted
string and plumbing for water pipes.
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Lithium, Li. As all the Group 1 elements, the
alkali metals, Lithium reacts with water, so it is not found in
nature. As a metal element it is as soft as cool butter. It burns in air to form the
oxide. Industrially it is used in alloys to increase the tensile
strength of the mixture. It emits a beautiful crimson flame test.
Medically it is used in compounds to clear out uric acid and to
relieve depression.
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Magnesium, Mg. Magnesium is very common in
the earth's crust, but only in compounds. The metal is a light, strong, metal
element that will burn (in thin pieces) in air with a bright blue-white flame. It
is used in places where tough metal alloys are needed to be
light weight, such as automobile wheels (mag wheels) and airplane
and helicopter bodies.
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Manganese, Mn. A magnetic metal with many of
the properties of iron, manganese is more brittle than iron. It is used mainly in
steel alloys to harden them. Potassium permanganate is one of the
best-know of the compounds of manganese. Potassium
permanganate is a beautiful purple compound that is an excellent
oxidizing agent.
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Mercury, Hg. The metal element is a liquid
between -39 °C and 356 °C. It has a regular coefficient of expansion, so the
most likely place for you to have seen elemental mercury is in a
liquid thermometer. As a liquid conductor of electricity, mercury
is used as the switch in thermostats. Mercury makes alloys called
amalgams with many metals. For many years amalgams have
been used as fillings for teeth. The name quicksilver, an old
English name, means, 'alive metal,' or 'lively metal' due to the way
the metal coheres to itself but does not wet many surfaces
commonly wet by water. Liquid mercury has a fairly high vapor
pressure, and the gas from it is a cumulative poison.
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Neon, Ne. The gas that
lends its name to the group of fluorescent lights made from
inert gases itself only produces a red-orange color in the
gas tubes. It is prepared by fractional distillation
of liquid air. As an inert element, it does not combine with
other elements to make compounds.
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Nickel, Ni. Yes, there is some nickel in the
USA five cent coin. Nickel is used for many alloys, generally making the alloy
stronger and less chemically active. It is a metal element in the
iron and cobalt group. Nickel with large surface area is used
as a catalyst for the hydrogenation of edible oils. Nickel is
used in some storage batteries.
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Nitrogen, H. There is a lot of nitrogen in
front of your face! About eighty percent of the atmosphere is
elemental nitrogen. Nitrogen gas (N2) is a
diatomic molecule with a triple (covalent) bond
between the atoms. The strong bond makes the element
somewhat inert. It is difficult to get atmospheric nitrogen into
compound. Since many organic compounds require nitrogen,
its availability is a limiting factor on biological growth. Thus,
nitrogen compounds are included in many fertilizers. (See
Phosphorus about fertilizers.) The process of combining nitrogen
into compounds is called fixing. Ammonia is produced by
the Haber process as one of the steps in producing nitrogen
compounds. Nitrogen compounds may be somewhat unstable,
therefore usable in explosives.
There is a wonderful article in the July 1997 issue of the
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN beginning on page 76, "Global Population and
the Nitrogen Cycle," by Vaclav Smil. This is a part of the
intriguing story of how chemistry and history and farming and
ecology are all intertwined with the nitrogen cycle.
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Oxygen, O. Just as nitrogen, oxygen is
abundantly available in element form in the atmosphere. Oxygen as a diatomic molecule (O2)
with double bonds between the atoms is about twenty percent of
the air. Pure oxygen at atmospheric pressures can fully
ignite a glowing wood splint, this being the classic test for the
presence of oxygen. Every element except for the inert gases
can chemically combine with oxygen, the metals in ionic bonds and
the non- metals with covalent bonds. Oxygen is
necessary for the respiration of all animals and almost all
combustion.
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Phosphorus, P. Along with nitrogen and
potassium, phosphorus is another non-metal element that is a
limiting factor in the growth of living things. The
standard notation for fertilizer is N P K. N is the percentage of
nitrogen as nitrate. P is the percentage of phosphorus as
phosphate, and K is the percentage of potassium. Phosphates in
waste water pumped directly into streams will produce a
proliferation of algae that clog waterways. Elemental phosphorus
comes in three allotropes, the white or yellow phosphorus
being the most common. White phosphorus can be changed to the red
form by heating to 250 °C, just thirty degrees below
the boiling point, and cooling. Red phosphorus does not
spontaneously ignite in air and is not poisonous as is the white
or yellow phosphorus.
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Platinum, Pt. The
free element platinum is a metal almost as inactive as gold.
For this reason and its silvery beauty, platinum has
been considered a precious metal. Most platinum is mined as a
small by-product of nickel mining. Finely divided platinum
can serve as a catalyst for several reactions.
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Potassium, K. The
word potash refers to potassium. That name may
have come from the practice of leaching potassium (and
sodium) hydroxide from the ashes of burnt wood. The lye
(hydroxides) would be boiled with fat (from meats cooked on
that same fire) to make soap. Potassium metal is a very soft
metal that very quickly becomes tarnished in the air. The
tarnishing can be slowed by storing the metal under kerosene.
Potassium is a Group 1 element, an alkali metal. It reacts
violently in water, burning with a bright blue-white flame.
Not only are potassium ions not poisonous, but they are required
by living things. (See Phosphorus about fertilizers.) Potassium
chloride is often used as a table salt substitute for people who
wish to limit the sodium intake.
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Radium, Ra. Radium is
the element that first made Madam Curie
famous. She and a coworker were the first to isolate the
element. Pierre and Marie Curie were both scientists working in
turn-of-the-century Paris. Having an active social life, the
Curies would throw parties at their home and show guests a test
tube of the new material. The test tube would glow brightly,
and the glow was visible even through closed eyelids! The Curies
didn't know that the rays from the radium were harmful.
Marie Curie suffered from what we now would call radiation
sickness. Her beautifully luminescent radium was the first
element found to be radioactive. The strange fact of radium
giving off light and spontaneously changing to another element
forever altered our ideas of the structure of the atom. Radium is
a Group 2 element, but because of its radioactivity, it is not
usually found in basic chemistry labs.
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Radon, Rn. The heaviest of
the inert gases, radon is a radioactive
gas. Unlike its lighter cousins, radon is not used in fluorescent
lights. The radiation from radon has been shown to cause cancer
in human beings in some buildings in which the radon seeps in
from cracks in basement floors.
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Rubidium, Rb. The name of rubidium comes from
the deep red flame test it gives. As it is an alkali metal, Group
1, it makes similar compounds to sodium and potassium. A very
soft metal element, it reacts violently with water.
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Silicon, Si. Pronounce the
name to rhyme with "kill-a-don" to keep from confusing it with a
class of its compounds, silicones, pronounced to rhyme with
"kill-a-phone." Elemental silicon in its most
common allotropic form looks like a lump of very shiny coal. It
is not malleable. Hit a lump of silicon and it shatters, spraying
needle-sharp shards. It is a semi-conductor of electricity, a
property that makes it valuable in electronic components. Silicon
is the second most abundant element in the earth's crust,
but it is never found in the native state. Chemically silicon is
similar to carbon. It does not make ionic bonds, but makes four
covalent bonds. Sand and other minerals are made of silicon
dioxide. Silicones, organic compounds with silicon in placed of
carbon, have been used to for an incredible number of biological
tasks.
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Silver, Ag. Known far
before the Romans called it argentum, silver can be found in
the native state and in compounds. Silver is
the best of conductors of heat and electricity and almost the
most malleable and ductile metal, second only to gold. Silver is
harder than gold, but it reacts with some acids. The black
tarnish on silver is silver sulfide, usually from combination
with sulfur compounds in the air. Dilute silver nitrate is used as an
antiseptic. Silver chlorides change on exposure to light, this
reaction being the basis for black-and-white photography.
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Sodium, Na. Sodium is the
most abundant of the alkali metals
(Group 1) in the earth's crusts, but it is never found in
the native state. Sodium chloride, table salt, is its most common
compound. Sodium produces a pair of very strong lines close
together in the yellow color region as an emission spectrum,
giving the sodium flame test the characteristic yellow color.
Free elemental sodium is a very soft metal that reacts quickly
with the air. As with other alkali metals, storing it under
kerosene decreases its availability to the moisture in the air.
Almost all the salts of sodium are soluble in water. Baking soda
is sodium bicarbonate. Soda lye, or caustic soda, is sodium
hydroxide. Sodium ions are needed by most living things.
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Strontium, Sr. The flame
test for strontium is a brilliant dark red. This color is
spectacularly shown in fireworks displays with
strontium salts. Elemental strontium is a hard silvery metal of
Group 2, very similar to calcium. Strontium 90, a radioactive
isotope of strontium, can be in the fallout from nuclear
explosions. It has been recorded that strontium 90 landing on
vegetation eaten by dairy cattle can appear in the milk of those
animals, similarly the usual calcium.
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Sulfur, S. The brimstone
of the Bible, sulfur was most likely
encountered by prehistoric humankind near geothermal sources such
as volcanoes and geysers. Sulfur's two crystal forms,
monoclinic and rhombic, both have a melting temperature just
above the boiling point of water at one atmosphere. Under
pressure, as under the earth, water temperature can exceed the
melting temperature for sulfur. Since sulfur does not dissolve in
water, the liquid sulfur immediately solidifies as it reaches the
earth's surface, leaving the distinctive non-metal pale
yellow brittle solid. The Frasch process for mining sulfur does
exactly the same as the geothermal process. Superheated water
under pressure is pumped into the earth and retrieved with melted
sulfur in it, mimicking the natural process for sulfur exposure.
There is another non-crystalline form of elemental sulfur that
can be made by melting crystalline sulfur, but the amorphous
allotrope is unstable, reverting to one of the crystalline forms
on standing. Sulfur burns in air (the stone that burns) to form
sulfur dioxide. This is the first step in the manufacture of
sulfuric acid, by far the most used compound of sulfur. It has
been said that the amount of sulfuric acid made is a good measure
of the level of industrialization of a country. Sulfur is one of
the main ingredients in the vulcanization of rubber.
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Tin, Sn. Tin was the
secret ingredient in bronze that made it possible for the
copper alloy to hold a minimal edge for swords. Tin is a
metal element that has a characteristic tendency to form crystals
in the solid metal. It does not react with mild acids or the
normal constituents of the air, making it usable as a coating to
cheaper metals. Iron or steel coated with tin or zinc, called
Galvanized, is used for "tin roofing, "tin cans,'
and "tin soldiers" (perhaps even "tin woodmen").
It is easy to spot when tin is used to cover other metals because
of the large crystals appearing on the surface. Pewter and solder
are other important alloys of tin.
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Titanium, Ti. The
ores of titanium are not very common, but the metal is a
very light, strong metal. Titanium is much stronger per mass
than iron. Airplanes, bicycles, and ultracentrifuge rotors
are some of the items that work best made of titanium because
of its lightness (small density) and great tensile strength.
Titanium oxide makes a beautiful white pigment.
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Tritium, T. Tritium is
the heaviest known isotope of hydrogen, having one proton and
two neutrons. It is not an element. See 'deuterium'.
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Tungsten, W. Having a
melting point of almost six thousand degrees Celsius and good
electrical conductivity, tungsten makes a good incandescent
light bulb filament. It is a hard, brittle metal. The
great majority of tungsten is used to alloy with steel to make a
hard, tough metal for uses like high speed drilling and cutting
tools.
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Uranium, U. The highest atomic number of the
naturally occurring elements, uranium has a fissionable isotope.
Some of the first "atomic bombs" were fission devices
with uranium. Some nuclear energy facilities use uranium as the
fuel to make electricity. Some of the yellow or black compounds
of uranium were used in ceramic glazes.
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Xenon, Xe. The heaviest
and the rarest of the naturally occurring inert gases in air,
xenon produces a beautiful blue glow in fluorescent tubes.
It has the highest boiling point of the natural inert gases
at -107 °C. As the other inert gases, it makes no natural
compounds, but it can be coaxed into making a few compounds
such as XeF6, xenon hexafluoride.
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Zinc, Zn. For many
centuries zinc was included in the metals of
brass without being recognized as an element. The element zinc
is used to cover other metals to protect from oxidation and as
one electrode in some electric cells. Elemental zinc is a bluish
metal that has the surprising property of being slightly brittle
at room temperature, but more malleable at or above 100 °C.
Zinc metal is used to alloy with other metals. Zinc oxide is used
as an antiseptic and as a white pigment.
Back to the beginning of Elements
Heuristics
Numbers and Math
Units and Measures
Atomic Structure
Periodic Table
States of Matter
Compounds
Reactions
Mols, Stoichiometry, and Percents
Oxidation and Reduction Reactions
Gases
Solutions
Acids and bases
Kinetics
Thermochemistry
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