Zinc
Zinc (from German Zink) is a chemical element in the periodic table that has the symbol Zn and atomic number 30.
History
Zinc alloys have been used for centuries, as brass goods dating to 1000-1400 BC have been found in Palestine and zinc objects with 87% zinc have been found in prehistoric Transylvania. Because of the low boiling point and high chemical reactivity of this metal (isolated zinc would tend to go up the chimney rather than be captured), the true nature of this metal was not understood in ancient times.
Related Topics:
1000 - 1400 BC - Palestine - Transylvania
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The manufacture of brass was known to the Romans by about 30 BC, using a technique where calamine and copper were heated together in a crucible. The zinc oxides in calamine were reduced, and the free zinc metal was trapped by the copper, forming an alloy. The resulting calamine brass was either cast or hammered into shape.
Related Topics:
Brass - Romans - 30 BC - Calamine - Copper - Zinc oxide - Alloy - Calamine brass
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Smelting and extraction of impure forms of zinc was being accomplished as early as AD 1000 in India and China. By the end of the 14th century, the Hindus were aware of the existence of zinc as a metal separate from the seven known to the ancients. In the West, impure zinc as a remnant in melting ovens was known since Antiquity, but usually thrown away as worthless. Strabo mentions it as pseudo-arguros "mock silver". The Berne Zinc tablet is a votive plaque dating to Roman Gaul, probably made from such zinc remnants. The discovery of pure metallic zinc is most often credited to the German Andreas Marggraf, in the year 1746, though the whole story is considerably more involved.
Related Topics:
1000 - India - China - 14th century - Berne Zinc tablet - Roman Gaul - Andreas Marggraf - 1746
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Descriptions of brass manufacture are found in Western Europe in the writings of Albertus Magnus, c. 1248, and by the 16th century, the understanding and awareness of the new metal broadened considerably. Georg Agricola observed, in 1546, that a white metal could be condensed and scraped off the walls of a furnace when zinc ores were smelted. He added in his notes that a similar metal called "zincum" was being produced in Silesia. Paracelsus (died 1541) was the first in the West to say that "zincum" was a new metal and that it had a separate set of chemical properties from other known metals.
Related Topics:
1248 - 16th century - Georg Agricola - 1546 - Paracelsus - 1541
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The upshot is that zinc was known by the time Marggraf made his discoveries and in fact zinc had been isolated two years earlier by another chemist, Anton von Swab. However, Marggraf's reports were exhaustive and methodical and the quality of his research cemented his reputation as the discoverer of zinc.
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Before the discovery of the zinc sulfide flotation technique, calamine was the mineral source of zinc metal.
Related Topics:
Zinc sulfide - Flotation - Calamine
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | Notable characteristics |
| ► | Applications |
| ► | History |
| ► | Biological role |
| ► | Abundance |
| ► | Zinc production |
| ► | Compounds |
| ► | Isotopes |
| ► | Precautions |
| ► | References |
| ► | External links |
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