Concepts

Alloys

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectScience

Definition

A solid mixture (or solution) of two or more elements, at least one of which is a metal, made to obtain properties better than those of the pure metals.

Key points

  • Alloying improves strength, hardness, corrosion resistance, or appearance; for example pure iron is soft, but steel (iron with carbon) is hard and strong.
  • Common alloys: steel (iron + carbon), stainless steel (iron + chromium + nickel, rust-resistant), brass (copper + zinc), bronze (copper + tin), and solder (tin + lead).
  • Duralumin (aluminium + copper + magnesium + manganese) is light and strong and is used in aircraft; amalgam is an alloy in which one metal is mercury.
  • Alloys generally have a lower melting point and lower electrical conductivity than their pure components; this is why solder melts easily for joining circuits.
  • German silver (copper + zinc + nickel) contains no silver, despite its name.

Why it matters for CAPF

The composition and uses of common alloys (steel, stainless steel, brass, bronze, solder, duralumin) are frequently asked materials-chemistry facts, and high-strength alloys matter for defence equipment.

Common confusion

German silver and solder contain no silver and no actual change of element; they are simply mixtures. Brass is copper and zinc, while bronze is copper and tin; these are commonly mixed up. Steel is an alloy of iron with a small amount of carbon, not a pure metal.

One-line recall

Alloys are metal mixtures made for better properties: steel (iron + carbon), brass (copper + zinc), bronze (copper + tin), duralumin (light, aircraft).

concept catalysts, concept superconductors

Parent note

chemistry everyday

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