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๐Ÿงช Alloys as Useful Materials

Spec 4.10.3.2 ๐Ÿ“™ Higher
๐Ÿ“– In-Depth Theory

Why Alloys Are More Useful Than Pure Metals

Pure metals often have properties that limit their usefulness:
Pure iron is TOO SOFT โ€” deforms easily under stress.
Pure gold is TOO SOFT for jewellery โ€” scratches easily.
Pure aluminium is TOO WEAK for aircraft.
ALLOYS are mixtures of metals (or metal + non-metal) โ€” mixing changes properties.
WHY ALLOYS ARE HARDER:
In a pure metal, layers of atoms slide over each other easily (metallic bonding โ€” sea of electrons).
In an alloy, different-sized atoms DISRUPT the regular lattice โ€” layers can't slide as easily.
Result: HARDER, STRONGER, MORE RESISTANT to deformation.
EXAMPLE โ€” iron and steel:
Pure iron: soft, weak, few uses.
Add carbon (0.1โ€“1.5%): STEEL โ€” harder, stronger, less malleable.
Different amounts of carbon give different properties:
Low carbon steel (<0.3%): tough, ductile, used in car body panels.
High carbon steel (>0.6%): harder, brittle, used in cutting tools.

Important Alloys

STEEL:
Iron + carbon (+ other elements for specialist steels).
Stainless steel: iron + chromium (~18%) + nickel (~8%) โ€” resists corrosion, used in cutlery, surgical instruments, kitchen equipment.
High-speed steel: iron + tungsten โ€” maintains hardness at high temperatures, used in drill bits and cutting tools.
BRONZE:
Copper + tin โ€” harder than copper alone.
Used historically for weapons and tools; now: bearings, sculptures, bells, musical instruments (cymbals).
BRASS:
Copper + zinc โ€” harder than copper, good acoustic properties.
Used in: musical instruments (trumpets, trombones), taps, valves, decorative fittings.
GOLD ALLOYS:
Pure gold (24 carat) is too soft for jewellery.
18 carat gold = 75% gold + 25% silver/copper/zinc.
9 carat gold = 37.5% gold โ€” cheaper, more durable.
Different alloys give different colours: yellow, white, rose gold.
ALUMINIUM ALLOYS:
Pure aluminium: light but weak.
Aluminium + copper/magnesium/silicon: much stronger, still lightweight.
Used in aircraft, bicycle frames, cars.

Alloy Design and Properties

CHOOSING ALLOYS:
Properties can be tuned by varying composition:
More carbon in steel โ†’ harder but more brittle.
More chromium in stainless steel โ†’ better corrosion resistance.
More zinc in brass โ†’ harder but less malleable.
COMMERCIAL APPLICATIONS:
COINS: cupronickel (copper + nickel) โ€” durable, resistant to corrosion.
'GOLD' in electronics: gold is used in connectors โ€” excellent conductor, doesn't corrode, but expensive.
SHAPE MEMORY ALLOYS: nitinol (nickel + titanium) โ€” return to original shape when heated, used in medical stents and eyeglass frames.
PURITY AND CARATS:
Gold purity is measured in CARATS:
24 carat = 100% gold (pure).
18 carat = 75% gold.
9 carat = 37.5% gold.
Higher carat = softer and more expensive.
โš ๏ธ Common Mistake

Alloys are HARDER than pure metals because different-sized atoms DISRUPT the regular lattice โ€” they prevent layers sliding over each other. An alloy is NOT simply a compound โ€” the components are not chemically combined in fixed ratios. Stainless steel contains iron + CHROMIUM (not carbon) for corrosion resistance.

๐Ÿ“Œ Key Note

Alloys harder than pure metals โ€” different-sized atoms disrupt lattice, prevent layer sliding. Steel: iron + carbon. Stainless steel: + chromium + nickel. Bronze: copper + tin. Brass: copper + zinc. Gold alloys measured in carats (24 = 100%). Aluminium alloys: lightweight + strong for aircraft.

๐ŸŽฏ Matching Activity โ€” Alloy Compositions and Uses

Match each alloy to its composition and main use. โ€” drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.

Steel
Drop here
Stainless steel
Drop here
Bronze
Drop here
Brass
Drop here
Copper + zinc โ€” used in musical instruments, taps and decorative fittings
Iron + carbon โ€” harder and stronger than pure iron, used in construction
Iron + chromium + nickel โ€” corrosion resistant, used in cutlery and surgical instruments
Copper + tin โ€” harder than copper, used in sculptures, bells and bearings
โญ Higher Tier Only

Explain alloy hardness in terms of disruption of regular metallic lattice โ€” different-sized atoms prevent layer sliding. Calculate percentage composition of alloys. Compare properties of different steel grades for specific applications. Evaluate alloy selection using data on tensile strength, density and corrosion resistance.

๐Ÿ”ฌ Triple Science Only

Alloys as useful materials (4.10.3.2) is chemistry-only โ€” not in Combined Science.

๐ŸŽฏ Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. Why are alloys harder than the pure metals they are made from?
2. A ring is labelled '18 carat gold'. What percentage of it is pure gold?
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