Thursday, April 17, 2008




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Zinc is a material that has gone through substantial changes in the way that it is used and in the way that it is perceived, both by specialists and by the general public. The broad categories of end use remain much the same, i.e. coatings to protect iron and steel, brass, zinc alloy castings, sheet for building applications and a range of chemical applications. However, within these broad areas there are major differences in process and product which have given a new lease of life to what could otherwise have become a rather boring traditional material.
Zinc Coatings on Steel
One of the biggest uses of zinc is in making protective coatings for steel. The development of the wide range of zinc coatings arose from two happy accidents of chemistry, the relatively slow and predictable rate of atmospheric corrosion of zinc compared with steel, and the relative positions of zinc and iron in the electrochemical series. Zinc will corrode preferentially to give cathodic protection to iron when both are in contact in an aqueous medium. This is used to good effect to protect immersed structures such as ships’ hulls, drilling rigs and pipelines. It also means that any bare areas in a zinc coating on steel, caused by damage or operations such as cutting or drilling, are still protected by the surrounding zinc.
Taken together, these two factors provide the basis of a unique corrosion protection system which uses some 4 million tonnes of zinc annually to protect around 100 million tonnes of steel. This represents almost half the total world consumption of zinc.
Other Zinc Coatings
Originally, zinc coatings were applied by hot dip galvanizing. This involves dipping prepared steel in molten zinc, figure 1. This was done mainly with fabricated steel or with sheets of steel, many of which were profiled to produce the ubiquitous ‘corrugated iron’. The first development from this was the production of continuous strip steel with a galvanized coating. Refinements of this process today account for the greatest part of the total tonnage of steel carrying zinc coatings.
Figure 1. Hot dip galvanising of fabricated steel.
Other processes are available and are used where their specific characteristics are required. These include electroplating (also known as electrogalvanizing), flame sprayed coating, sherardising, mechanical plating and using zinc rich paints.
Recent Zinc Galvanising Alloys
Process developments in continuous galvanizing have enabled a range of coatings to be produced with very closely controlled thickness and surface finish. These can be formed and joined without significant damage to the protective coating. Along with these developments, a series of alloys for coatings have been produced. The most important of these are Galvalume and Galfan. Galvalume consists of about 55% aluminium and 45% zinc with a small amount of silicon. It is being used extensively around the world as it has better atmospheric corrosion resistance than pure zinc however, it loses the ability to protect any exposed steel such as that at cut edges. Galfan is a zinc, 5% aluminium alloy containing small amounts of rare earth metals which has a substantial and growing niche market in which its properties are valuable. Its corrosion resistance is better than that of zinc and it retains some cathodic protection capability.
Applications
Automotive
Improved coatings have encouraged the development of new applications. For example, galvanized steel with a very fine surface finish is used to produce the parts of car bodies that are vulnerable to corrosion. The surface finish of the coated steel is such that there is no visible difference in appearance after painting between panels with and without the zinc protection. Such applications have been cited as a major factor in the market for zinc. In fact, their importance is much less than that of the building and construction industries.
Building and Construction Industries
Building and construction industries use at least two thirds of all the coated steel strip produced, mainly for roofing and cladding of commercial and industrial buildings. Much of the material used in building has a mill-applied organic coating on top of the zinc. Buildings in this ‘colour coated’ steel are a familiar sight, particularly in out-of-town shopping centres and industrial estates. Colour coated steel can provide lifetime protection for such buildings.
More recently, the use of galvanised steel in domestic buildings has grown considerably. The traditional method of building in much of Europe is to use solid brick or block exterior plus internal walls. This is in contrast to North America and Australia, where timber framing has been the most common form of construction. With the increasing cost of timber, there is a substantial move towards the use of steel frames formed from galvanised steel strip, for both the external walls and the internal partitions. This also takes advantage of the fact that the steel does not warp or rot. The same interest extends to products such as window and door frames and, providing they can be made visually acceptable, to roofing and cladding.
Hot Dip Galvanising
Hot dip galvanizing in its original form (as applied to fabricated steelwork) is also a growing industry. That is not true of many industries that are more than 150 years old and still recognisable to someone from that era. The reasons for the process’s continued success are in the intrinsic relationship between iron and zinc, improved organisation of the handling of work in the plant and, most importantly, a better appreciation of the economics of corrosion protection. As these factors are better understood by design engineers, the tonnages of steel galvanized have risen steadily. In Europe the total annual tonnage rose from 3.6 million tonnes in 1983 to 4.6 million tonnes in 1996 and the trend continues.
Zinc Castings
Another growth area is that of zinc castings, which is based on new alloys and new technology. Until the 1930s there were only two zinc casting alloys of any commercial significance zinc-4% aluminium pressure die casting alloys with and without 1% copper. Zinc casting now has a family of alloys - the specifier can choose the alloy and casting process most suited to their product. Zinc alloy castings are unique, particularly when produced by the pressure die casting process. They can be made to extremely close tolerances, with excellent surface finish, have a range of useful mechanical properties (especially ductility) and can receive a wide range of applied finishes. As a result, zinc castings find a range of applications from automobiles to zip fasteners.
Competition from plastics threatened the market for zinc castings in the 1970s, but the development of new alloys and dramatic improvements in process control enabled zinc castings to hold their own in many areas, particularly where strength and applied finishes are required. A further benefit of the process improvements was that castings could be made much thinner so that considerably less metal was used for a given product. This in turn meant weight saving, (a valuable point, particularly in automotive applications), while at the same time quality and consistency improved and production costs were reduced. So although far more castings are produced today than, say, 15 years ago, this is not reflected in the tonnage of zinc used in casting.
Zinc Recycling
A key part of the modern materials world in which zinc finds itself is recycling. Zinc, in common with all metals (and unlike synthetic materials) can be recycled indefinitely without degradation. This has been appreciated for many years and zinc scrap and residues are classified, traded and priced according to their zinc content and to the economics of turning the scrap into a useful product. There is more to recycling than simple returning a material to its original state. This is particularly true for zinc, for which scrap and residue arise in some ten different ways and are recovered into a variety of different forms. Old scrap zinc sheet is easily returned into metal ingots. Process residues from galvanizing (drosses) are highly valued raw materials for the production of zinc pigments and other chemicals. Brass scrap is recycled entirely within the brass industry. And when zinc coated steel is recycled, the zinc volatilises, and is captured in the flue dust and can be used alongside zinc ores in the production of primary zinc metal.
Availability of zinc for recycling depends principally on two factors, namely the production of process scrap from current consumption and the arising of zinc from end of life products. Process scrap recycled immediately and virtually completely. However, given the long service life of many products containing zinc, the arising of old scrap is dependent on the usage of zinc many years ago. The total amount of zinc scrap is rising around world and is estimated at about 3 million tonnes. The vast majority of this is recycled or in store, pending recycling. No more than 5% is unaccounted, a record that few materials can beat.


[I am doing my project now] 5:14 AM






Zinc - Minerals and Uses


In the 1200’s, India produced zinc metal by burning organic materials with smithsonite (ZnCO3, zinc carbonate). Zinc was used long before it was known to be a distinct element. Brass items (brass is an alloy, that is, a mixture, of copper and zinc) have been discovered dating back to as early as 1000 B.C. Zinc was isolated and identified as a distinct element in 1746 by the German, Andreas Marggraf.

Zinc is a blue-gray, metallic element, with the atomic number 30. At room temperature, zinc is brittle, but it becomes malleable at 100 C. Zinc is a moderately good conductor of electricity and is relatively resistant to corrosion in air or water, and therefore is used as a protective layer on iron products to protect them from rusting.

Zinc is recovered from a number of different zinc minerals including sphalerite (ZnS), smithsonite (ZnCO3), and zincite (ZnO).

Adequate amounts of zinc are essential to a healthy life in all humans and animals. It is necessary for the function of a number of different enzymes. It has also been proved necessary for skin and bone growth. The body uses zinc to process food and nutrients. When animals do not have enough zinc in their systems, they need to consume 50% more food to match the weight gain of an animal with enough zinc in its body. About 0.003% zinc is needed for proper health.

Major zinc producing nations include the United States, Canada, Australia, Mexico and Peru.
Zinc is relatively non-reactive in air or water. Consequently, it is applied in thin layers to iron and steel products that need to be protected from rusting. This process is called galvanizing in which the metal is dipped in molten zinc. More than half of the zinc consumed is used for galvanizing.

The second largest use of zinc is as an alloy and the remaining zinc consumption is for making paint, chemicals, agricultural applications, in the rubber industry, in TV screens, fluorescent lights and for dry cell batteries.

There are a number of alternative materials that are used in place of zinc. For example, aluminum and plastics can be used in place of galvanized steel. A number of elements can replace zinc in its electronics and paint applications. Cadmium and aluminum alloy coatings can be used in place of zinc to protect steel from corrosion.


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Sources

The principal ores of zinc are sphalerite (sulfide), smithsonite (carbonate), calamine (silicate), and franklinite (zine, manganese, iron oxide). One method of zinc extraction involves roasting its ores to form the oxide and reducing the oxide with coal or carbon, with subsequent distillation of the metal.

Properties

Zinc is a bluish-white, lustrous metal. It is brittle at ordinary temperatures but malleable at 100 to 150oC. It is a fair conductor of electricity, and burns in air at high red heat with evolution of white clouds of the oxide.

It exhibits superplasticity. Neither zinc nor zirconium is ferromagnetic; but ZrZn2 exhibits ferromagnetism at temperatures below 35oK. It has unusual electrical, thermal, optical, and solid-state properties that have not been fully investigated.

Uses

The metal is employed to form numerous alloys with other metals. Brass, nickel silver, typewriter metal, commercial bronze, spring bronze, German silver, soft solder, and aluminum solder are some of the more important alloys.

Large quantities of zinc are used to produce die castings, which are used extensively by the automotive, electrical, and hardware industries. An alloy called Prestal(R), consisting of 78 percent zinc and 22 percent aluminum, is reported to be almost as strong as steel and as easy to mold as plastic. The alloy said to be so moldable that it can be molded into form using inexpensive ceramics or cement die casts.

Zinc is also used extensively to galvanize other metals such as iron to prevent corrosion. Zinc oxide is a unique and very useful material for modern civilization. It is widely used in the manufacture of paints, rubber products, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, floor coverings, plastics, printing inks, soap, storage batteries, textiles, electrical equipment, and other products. Lithopone, a mixture of zinc sulfide and barium sulfate, is an important pigment.

Zinc sulfide is used in making luminous dials, X-ray and TV screens, and fluorescent lights.

The chloride and chromate are also important compounds. Zinc is an essential element in the growth of human beings and animals. Tests show that zinc-deficient animals require 50 percent more food to gain the same weight as an animal supplied with sufficient zinc.



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Basic Information


Name: Zinc
Symbol: Zn
Atomic Number: 30
Atomic Mass: 65.39 amu
Melting Point: 419.58 °C (692.73 K, 787.24396 °F)
Boiling Point: 907.0 °C (1180.15 K, 1664.6 °F)
Number of Protons/Electrons: 30
Number of Neutrons: 35
Classification: Transition Metal
Crystal Structure: Hexagonal
Density @ 293 K: 7.133 g/cm3
Color: bluish



[I am doing my project now] 3:15 AM






ZINC


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