Metals
Metals
Metals
Metallic properties
Physical properties
We have touched on the physical properties of metals in the previous topics. Here is a
brief summary:
Shiny
Good conductors of heat/electricity
High density
Malleable and ductile
Usually solid at room temperature
Sonorous (makes bell-like sounds when struck)
Chemical properties
Metal + Acid
Metal + Oxygen
Metal + Steam
Note: Reactive metals such as sodium and potassium will react fine in cold water to
produce hydroxide salts. Less reactive metals like copper will not react in cold water.
They will only react in steam and produce oxide salts instead of hydroxide salts.
Alloys
An alloy is a mixture of two or more metals, or a mixture of one or more metals with a
non-metal. Alloys are used in preference to pure metals because they can be designed
to have properties for whatever usage purpose. For example, they may be made to be
harder and more resistant to corrosion.
Alloys are harder than pure metals because the presence of different sized atoms will
make the layers less mobile and prevent them from slipping.
This diagram below represents a simple alloy: The mixture of metallic atoms (red)
with other different atoms (blue):
The reactivity series orders metals from most reactive to least reactive:
NOTE: The main ones you need to know are potassium, sodium, calcium,
magnesium, zinc, iron, hydrogen, and copper
The reactivity series tells us that potassium (highest in series) atoms have a much
higher tendency to become cations than, say, platinum (lowest), and therefore much
more reactive.
Remember, we have looked at metal + water (cold/steam) & acid reactions above.
As you can see, the reactions become less vigorous down the table, suggesting the
reduction of reactivities of the metals.
Remember, reduction is the loss of oxygen. If a metal oxide gets “reduced” by carbon,
it means that carbon “steals” an oxygen from the metal oxide. For example:
The rule is, only a more reactive element can “steal” an oxygen from an oxide.
In this scenario, zinc oxide is reduced by carbon because carbon is more reactive than
zinc (refer to the reactivity series).
This is why the metal oxides that have metals above carbon on the reactivity series
can not be reduced but those that are below it can.
Displacement reactions
As mentioned above, the reactivity series is based upon the metal’s tendency to
become cations. The greater the tendency, the greater its reactivity.
Displacement reactions involve one ion replacing another. Whether or not a metal can
displace another metal in a compound is strictly dependent on their relative
reactivities.
Example 1
Examine the reaction above. What has happened to each of the metals in the
equation?
The zinc has changed from the zinc metal to the ion form (in zinc sulfate).
Meanwhile, the copper ions (in copper sulfate) has become copper metal:
This is a redox reaction. Zinc loses 2 electrons (oxidation) and donates them to the
copper ions that ultimately gain the 2 electrons (reduction).
Quite simply, the more reactive metal zinc has displaced the copper in copper sulfate.
This displacement occurs because of the transfer of electrons in the redox equation
above.
Example 2
In this example, zinc can NOT displace the magnesium in magnesium chloride
because it’s tendency to form ions is lower (i.e. less reactive).
A decomposition reaction occurs when one reactant breaks down into two or more
products. The more reactive the metal, the more stable its compounds are (and thus
harder to decompose).
Metal hydroxides
NOTE: Sodium and potassium hydroxides are exceptions and do not decompose
when heated.
Metal nitrates
NOTE: Sodium and potassium nitrates decompose to nitrite + oxygen. Other metal
nitrates however, decompose to the metal oxide, nitrogen dioxide, and oxygen.
Metal carbonates
Extraction of metals
Reactive metals such as potassium, sodium, calcium, magnesium, and aluminium are
extracted from their ores via electrolysis of a molten compound.
CIE requires you to understand the extraction of zinc, iron, and aluminium.
Zinc extraction
Iron extraction
Aluminium extraction
The details of aluminium extraction has been covered in the topic of electrolysis.
Please click here and scroll down the page to find the relevant information.
NOTE: Aluminium is a reactive metal, and quite often it reacts with oxygen in the air
to form a ‘aluminium oxide coating’. This oxide coating makes the
metal seem unreactive.
Uses of metals
Here we go through some brief uses of several different metals
Aluminium
Aircraft manufacture due to strength and low density
Food contains due to corrosion resistance
Zinc
Galvanizing and brass making
Copper
Electrical wiring and utensils
Steel
Car bodies and machinery
Stainless steel