Sunday, December 30, 2012

2013 Chemistry Calendar

The quintessential Chemistry Calendar for 2013 is now available to download for free at AUS-e-TUTE
Now there's no excuse for not celebrating the birthday of significant Chemists!

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Gallium Practical Jokes

If you ask a Chemist what their favourite metal is, the chances are they will answer gallium.

Historically, gallium is significant because it was one of the elements that Dmitri  Mendeleev predicted the properties of, before the element had even been discovered! Mendeleev called the element ekkaaluminium.

Gallium has gained commercial value because gallium compounds such as gallium arsenide, GaAs, are important semiconductors in the electronics industry.

But the reason many Chemists like gallium is because of its interesting physical properties.
Gallium is a silvery metal with a metallic lustre that looks a lot like silver. Unlike silver however, gallium is not found as the element in nature. Gallium compounds occur in minute quantities in bauxite (an aluminium ore) and sphalerite (a zinc ore) and can be extracted from these ores by smelting.
The melting point of gallium is about 29.8oC and its boiling point is about 2204oC. This means that at temperatures between 29.8oC and 2204oC gallium is a liquid. Or put another way, if you have some gallium in a test tube on a hot summer's day in Sydney, or Miami, or anywhere where the temperature gets above 30oC, what you will see is a puddle of molten metal, but if you take the molten gallium back into an air-conditioned room where the temperature is likely to be less than 25oC, the gallium will freeze again.
And this is the basis of the disappearing spoon trick as shown in the video.

At temperatures below its melting point, gallium is a solid and can be fashioned into a spoon shape.  Being a silvery, metallic metal, it looks just like a silver teaspoon. However, if you were to stir your cup of hot tea or hot coffee with the gallium spoon, the spoon will melt because the temperature of the tea or coffee will be above the melting point of the gallium.



Further Reading
History of the Periodic Table
Periodic Table of the Elements
Metals and Non-metals
Chemical and Physical Changes
Writing Ionic Formula
Naming Ionic Compounds
Temperature Conversions
Latent Heat

Suggested Study Questions
  1. Use the Periodic Table to find the following for gallium:
    • symbol
    • atomic number
    • atomic mass
  2. With reference to the Periodic Table explain why Mendeleev would have named the unknown element, located where gallium is now known to be, ekkaaluminium.
  3. Gallium often occurs in compounds in the +3 oxidation state, or as an ion in salts with a charge of 3+. Give the most likely formula for each of the following:
    • gallium chloride
    • gallium oxide
    • gallium hydroxide
  4. Give the most likely name for each of the following:
    • GaH3
    • Ga(NO3)3
    • Ga2(CO3)3
  5. Does the video show a chemical or a physical process? Explain your answer.
  6. Sketch a temperature vs time curve to describe the melting of gallium.
  7. Convert the melting point and boiling point of gallium from centigrade to kelvin.
  8. Mercury has a melting point of about 234K and a boiling point of around 630K. Convert these temperatures to oC
  9. Explain why mercury is a liquid at room temperature and pressure.
  10. Could you freeze mercury by walking into an air-conditioned room like you can gallium? Explain your answer.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

AUS-e-NEWS


An accident led to the discovery of gold in Australia's desert in 1893.
Within months a township grew up in the desert around the gold deposit.
A few years later, a scientific discovery led to a second gold rush which caused the inhabitants to destroy their town!

Read more in the December 2012 edition of AUS-e-NEWS.

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