1 / 10

Tungsten

Tungsten. By: Jewlz. Tungsten. Atomic Symbol is W Atomic Number is 74 Atomic Weight is 183.84(1) Periodic Table Group is 6 The color is greyish white, lustrous Classification Metalic. Pictures of Tungsten 11 3. 2D Picture of Tungsten. Physical Properties !! .

Télécharger la présentation

Tungsten

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tungsten By: Jewlz

  2. Tungsten • Atomic Symbol is W • Atomic Number is 74 • Atomic Weight is 183.84(1) • Periodic Table Group is 6 • The color is greyish white, lustrous • Classification Metalic

  3. Pictures of Tungsten 113

  4. 2D Picture of Tungsten

  5. Physical Properties !!  • Melting Point- 3695[or 3422 degrees (Celsius( 6192 degree F)]K • Boiling Point-5828[or 5555 degrees Celsius( 10031 degrees F)]K • Density of solid- 19250 kg m-3

  6. Chemical Properties • Ground state electron configuration:  [Xe].4f14.5d4.6s2 2. Electrons per shell 2,8,18,32,12,2 3. 5d46s2 4. +4,+6 (mildly acidic oxide)

  7. Uses of Tungsten • useful for glass-to-metal seals since the thermal expansion is about the same as borosilicate glass • tungsten and its alloys are used extensively for filaments for electric lamps, electron and television tubes, and for metal evaporation work • electrical contact points for car distributors • X-ray targets • windings and heating elements for electrical furnaces • missile and high-temperature applications • high-speed tool steels and many other alloys contain tungsten • the carbide is important to the metal-working, mining, and petroleum industries • calcium and magnesium tungstates are widely used in fluorescent lighting • tungsten salts are used in the chemical and tanning industries • tungsten disulphide is a dry, high-temperature lubricant, stable to 500°C • tungsten bronzes and other tungsten compounds are used in paints • TV tubes (electron tubes) • X-ray targets

  8. History of Tungsten • Tungsten used to be known as wolfram (from wolframite, said to be named from wolf rahm or spumi lupi, because the ore interfered with the smelting of tin and was supposed to devour the tin). The de Elhuyar brothers found an acid in wolframite in 1783 that they succeeded in reducing to the elemental metal with charcoal.

  9. Allotropes, Isotopes and Important Compounds • Allotropes:4 A- Tungsten (A W), B Tungsten(B W), Y-Tungsten(Y W), Amorphous Tungsten • Isotopes: W184 • Other Important Information: found in Spain. It means heavy stone, gets it’s symbol from German name Wolfram

  10. Other Interesting Facts date of discovery 1783 Discoverer Don Fausto de Elhuyar Birth October 11,1755 Death January 6, 1833 Discoverer Juan José de Elhuyar Birth June 15, 1754 Death September 20, 1796 Location of Discovery Vergara, Spain

More Related