Ordinary tin is a silvery-white metal, is malleable,
somewhat ductile, and has a highly crystalline structure. Due to the breaking
of these crystals, a "tin cry" is heard when a bar is bent. The
element has two allotropic forms. On warming, grey (or α-tin, alpha) tin (with
a cubic structure), changes at 13.2°C into white (β-tin, beta), which is the
ordinary form of the metal. White tin has a tetragonal structure. When tin is
cooled below 13.2°C, it changes slowly from white to grey. This change is
affected by impurities such as aluminum and zinc, and can be prevented by small
additions of antimony or bismuth. The conversion was first noted as growths on
organ pipes in European cathedrals, where it was thought to be the devils work
(wasn't everything back then?). This conversion was also speculated to be
caused microorganisms and was called "tin plague" or "tin
disease".
Tin resists distilled, sea, and soft tap water, but is attacked by strong
acids, alkalis, and acid salts. Oxygen in solution accelerates the attack. When
heated in air, tin forms SnO2. It is, or was, used to plate steel, making
"tin cans". Tin is used as one component in bell metals.
•Name: Tin
•Symbol: Sn
•Atomic number: 50
•Atomic weight: 118.710 (7) [see note g]
•Standard state: solid at 298 K
•CAS Registry ID: 7440-31-5
•Group in periodic table: 14
•Group name: (none)
•Period in periodic table: 5
•Block in periodic table: p-block
•Color: silvery lustrous grey
•Classification: Metallic
Historical information
Origin of name: from the Anglo-Saxon word "tin" (the origin of the
symbol Sn comes from the Latin word "stannum" meaning
"tin"). Tin was known to the ancients and is mentioned in the Old
Testament. Early metal workers found it too soft for most purposes but mixed
with copper it gives the alloy bronze, of Bronze Age fame.
Tin is one of the elements which has an alchemical symbol, which looks almost
like a trident.
Physical properties
•Melting point: 505.08 [or 231.93 °C (449.47 °F)] K
•Boiling point: 2875 [or 2602 °C (4716 °F)] K
•Density of solid: 7310 kg m-3
Orbital properties
•Ground state electron configuration: [Kr].4d10.5s2.5p2
•Shell structure: 2.8.18.18.4
•Term symbol: 3P0
Isolation
There is normally little need to isolate tin metal in the laboratory as it is
readily available commercially. Tin is commonly available as the mineral
cassiterite, SnO2. Reduction of this dioxide with burning coal results in tin
metal and was probably how tin was made by the ancients.
SnO2 + 2C → Sn + 2CO
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