Metals are strong and bendy and they are great conductors
Most of the elements are metals
All metals have fairly similar properties
Metals are strong (hard to
break) but can be bent or
hammered into different
shapes
Great at conducting heat
Conduct electricity well
Metals (especially transition metals which
are found in the centre block of the periodic
table) have loads of everyday uses because of
these properties..
Their strength and bendability
makes them handy for making
into things like bridges and
car bodies
Metals are ideal if you
want to make something
that heat needs to travel
through like a saucepan
base
And their conductivity makes
them great for making things like
electrical wires
Metals are good but not perfect
Metals are very useful
structural materials but some
corrode when exposed to air
and water so they need to be
protected e.g. painting. If
metal corrodes they lose their
strength and hardness
Metals can get "tired" when
stresses and strains are
repeatedly put on them over
time. This is known as metal
fatigue and leads to metals
breaking which can be
dangerous
A metals properties decide on how its best used
Not all metals are the same
Copper is a good conductor of electricity so its ideal
for drawing out into electrical wires. Its hard and
strong but can be bent. It also doesnt react with
water
Aluminium is corrosion
resistant and has a low
density. Pure aluminium isnt
particularly strong but it forms
hard strong alloys
Titanium is another low
density metal. Unlike
aluminium its very
strong. Its also corrosion
resistant
Different metals are chosen for different uses because of their specific properties
If you were doing plumbing youd
pick a metal that could be bent to
make pipes and tanks and is
below hydrogen in the reactivity
seiries so it doesnt react with
water e.g. copper
If you wanted to make an aeroplane
youd probably use metal as its strong
and can be bent into shape but it would
need to be light e.g. aluminium
If your making replacement hips youd pick a
metal that wouldnt corrode when it comes in
contact with water. Itd also have to be light
and not that bendy e.g. titanium
Alloys are a mix of two metals
Pure iron tend to be a bit too bendy
1. Iron straight from the blast furnace
is only 96% iron. 4% is impurities
such as carbon
2. This impure iron is used
as cast iron. Its handy for
making ornamental railing
but it doesnt have many
uses because its to brittle
3. So all the impurities are removed from most of the blast
furnace iron. This pure iron has a regular arrangement of
identical atoms. The layers of atoms can slide over each other
which makes the iron soft and easily shaped however it is very
bendy
Most iron is converted into steel an alloy
Most of the pure iron is
changed into alloys called
steels. Steels are formed by
adding small amounts of
carbon and sometimes other
metals to the iron
Low carbon steel (0.1% carbon)
properties are: easily shaped, used for
car bodies
High carbon steel (1.5%
carbon) properties are: very
hard, inflexible, used for blades
for cutting tools and bridges
Stainless steel (chrominum
added and sometimes nickel)
properties are: corrosion
resistant, used for cutlery,
containers for corrosive
substances
Alloys are harder than pure metals
Different elements have different size atoms.
So when an element such as carbon is added
to pure iron the smaller carbon atom will upset
the layers of pure iron atoms making it more
difficult for them to slide over each other
Metals that are actually alloys
Bronze = copper + tin
Bronze is harder than
copper. Good for
making medals and
statues
Cupronickel = copper + nickel
This is hard and
corrosion resistant
used to make silver
coins
Gold alloys are used to make jewellery
Pure gold is too soft. Metals like zinc and silver are used to harden the gold
Aluminium alloys are used to make aircraft
Aluminium has a low density but its alloyed with small amounts of other metals to make it stronger