For organ pipes.
Atomic Number: |
50 |
Atomic Symbol: |
Sn |
Atomic Weight: |
118.69 |
Electron Configuration: |
[Kr]5s24d105p2 |
History
(anglo-Saxon, tin; L. stannum) Known to the ancients.
Sources
Tin is found chiefly in cassiterite (SnO2). Most of the world's supply comes from
Malaya, Bolivia, Indonesia, Zaire, Thailand, and Nigeria. The U.S. produces almost none,
although occurrences have been found in Alaska and California. Tin is obtained by reducing
the ore with coal in a reverberatory furnace.
Properties
Ordinary tin is composed of nine stable isotopes; 18 unstable isotopes are also known.
Ordinary tin is a silver-white metal, is malleable, somewhat ductile, and has a highly
crystalline structure. Due to the breaking of these crystals, a "tin cry" is
heard when a bar is bent.
Forms
The element has two allotropic forms at normal pressure. On warming, gray, or alpha
tin, with a cubic structure, changes at 13.2oC into white, or beta tin, the ordinary form
of the metal. White tin has a tetragonal structure. When tin is cooled below 13.2oC, it changes slowly from
white to gray. This change is affected by impurities such as aluminum and zinc, and can be
prevented by small additions of antimony or bismuth. This change from the alpha to beta
form is called the tin pest. There are few if any uses for gray tin. Tin takes a high
polish and is used to coat other metals to prevent corrosion or other chemical action.
Such tin plate over steel is used in the so-called tin can for preserving food.
Alloys of tin are very important. Soft solder, type metal, fusible metal, pewter,
bronze, bell metal, Babbitt metal, White metal, die casting alloy, and phosphor bronze are
some of the important alloys using tin.
Tin resists distilled sea and soft tap water, but is attacked by strong acids, alkalis,
and acid salts. Oxygen in solution accelerates the attack. When heated in air, tin forms
Sn2, which is feebly acid,
forming stannate salts with basic oxides. The most important salt is the chloride, which
is used as a reducing agent and as a mordant in calico printing. Tin salts sprayed onto
glass are used to produce electrically conductive coatings. These have been used for panel
lighting and for frost-free windshields. Most window glass is now made by floating molten
glass on molten tin (float glass) to produce a flat surface (Pilkington process).
Of recent interest is a crystalline tin-niobium alloy that is superconductive at very
low temperatures. This promises to be important in the construction of superconductive
magnets that generate enormous field strengths but use practically no power. Such magnets,
made of tin-niobium wire, weigh but a few pounds and produce magnetic fields that, when
started with a small battery, are comparable to that of a 100 ton electromagnet operated
continuously with a large power supply.
Handling
The small amount of tin found in canned foods is quite harmless. The agreed limit of
tin content in U.S. foods is 300 mg/kg. The trialkyl and triaryl tin compounds are used as
biocides and must be handled carefully.
Cost
Over the past 25 years the price of tin has varied from 50 cents/lb to its present
price of abotu $4/lb. as of January 1990.
|