Lesson 10 uses of metals and extraction

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Do now! Why do you think I’ve put carbon in the series??

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metals and extraction

Transcript of Lesson 10 uses of metals and extraction

Page 1: Lesson 10 uses of metals and extraction

Do now!

Why do you think I’ve put carbon in

the series??

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Last lesson

• Displacement reactions of ions in solution

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Displacement reactions

zinc magnesium copper lead

Zinc sulphate X X XMagnesium sulphate X X X XCopper sulphate XLead nitrate X X

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A more reactive metal will displace a less reactive metal from solution

Iron(s) + silver nitrate(aq) silver(s) + iron nitrate(aq)

Can you copy carefully please?

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Today’s lesson

• Extraction of metals from their ores related to the reactivity series

• Uses and properties of metals

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Ores

Most metals are found naturally in rocks called ores. They are in compounds, chemically bonded to other elements

iron ore

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Native

Some unreactive metals can be found as elements. They are called native metals.

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Roasting

Some unreactive metals can be extracted from a compound simply by heating. This is called roasting.

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More reactive metals?

• Zinc, iron, tin, lead

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Extracting metals with carbon

Carbon is higher than some metals in the reactivity series. It can be used to extract medium reactive metals.

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Extracting metals with carbon

lead oxide + carbon lead + carbon dioxide

2PbO(s) + C(s) 2Pb(s) + CO2(g)

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Extracting metals with carbon

lead oxide + carbon lead + carbon dioxide

2PbO(s) + C(s) 2Pb(s) + CO2(g)

carbon is oxidised

lead oxide is reduced

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The Blast furnace

1000°C

1500°C

1900°C

Iron ore (haematite), coke (carbon) and limestone (calcium carbonate)

Hot waste gases (recycled to heat furnace)

Blasts of hot airBlasts of hot air

Molten iron

YouTube - Steelmaking: Blast Furnace

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More reactive metals?

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Electrolysis of aluminium oxide

CO2

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Let’s extract a metal!

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Carbon + copper oxide copper + carbon dioxide

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Let’s extract a metal!

TEST next Friday 9th October on the “metals” topic

(everything we have done so far except Space and gravity)

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Uses of metals

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Gold

Unreactive, malleable and a good conductor of electricity

Jewelry, wires in computers, gold leaf

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Aluminium

Light, and a very unreactive oxide layer forms over the reactive metal means it does not corrode

Aircraft, cars, cutlery etc.

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Steel (mainly iron)

Strong, fairly cheap.

Building

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Copper

Ductile, unreactive and a good conductor

Saucepans, wires etc.

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Let’s go for a walk!

Looking for uses of metals