Alchemy 201 Notebook - Charlie Vidra

written by Charlie Conner

Notebook for year 2 alchemy

Last Updated

05/31/21

Chapters

8

Reads

1,230

Lesson 4 - Base Metals

Chapter 4

Base Metals – elements that oxidize or corrode easily



  -oxidation – loss of a subatomic particle and increase in oxygen



  -reduction – opposite (redox reaction)


Lead - plumbum (Pb)



 http://www.buzzle.com/images/religious-symbols/alchemy-saturn-symbol.jpg



  -Soft, malleable, heavy post-transition metal



  -carbon group



  -lowest base metal



  -easiest to manipulate with magic



  -Melting: 327.5 C/ 621.43 F/ 600.65 K



  -Boiling: 1740 C/ 3164 F/ 2013.15 K



  -Density: 11.342 g/cm3



  -used for coins (2000 BC)



  -metals with greater atomic weight will decay – nuclear transmutation



  -metal of transformation and redemption



  -linked with Saturn


Zinc (Zn)



http://s577.photobucket.com/user/Rosenquisitive/media/zincsymbols_zpsegvtzwbn.png.html





  -weakest metal; very cheap



  -Melting: 419.5 C/ 787.2 F/ 692.73 K



  -Boiling: 907 C/ 1664.6 F/ 1180.15 K



  -Density: 7.134 g/cm3



  -Rep. by 5 symbols – vary based on country and time period



  -commonly found in alloy form (mixture composed of an element or other metal mixed i.e. brass)



  -burns for rituals


Nickel (Ni)



http://s577.photobucket.com/user/Rosenquisitive/media/nickel_zps8olq1xhn.png.html





-  Silvery-white, gold tinge, high polish



-  Hard, ductile



-  Corrosion-resistant, slow rate of oxidation



-  Larger pieces, slower to react, protective oxide surface



-  Commonly found within crush, not surface



-  Magnetic @ room temp (along with iron, cobalt, gadolinium)



-  Melting: 1453 C/ 2647.4 F/ 1726.15 K



-  Boiling: 2732 C/ 4949.6 F/ 3005.15 K



-  Density: 8.902 g/cm3



-  Used 3500 BC in alloys to make bronze



-  Used in Chinese coins 235 BC



-  Element by Axel Fredrik Cronstedt (founder of modern mineralogy) 1751



-  Discovered b/c miners didn't extract the copper



-  Named for mischievous sprite from German miner myth



-  Used as green tint in glass (can also make blue, violet, black)



-  Mineral Concentration Charm to change color of glass



       o  Morbi Videntur (mor-BEE vi-DEN-ture)



       o  From left, drag wand diagonally down and right, back up diagonally towards right (V-shape); light jab towards target



       o  Focus on the color you want to change glass to, and concentration of mineral creating the color



       o  Correct: instant color change



       o  Incorrect: crack in glass



Iron (Fe)



https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b7/Mars_symbol.svg/2000px-Mars_symbol.svg.png





-  Luster, silvery-gray



-  Magnetic @ room temp



-  Most common element on Earth by mass



-  4th most abundant @ crust



-  Melting: 1535 C/ 2795 F/ 1808.15 K



-  Boiling: 2750 C/ 4982 F/ 3023.15 K



-  Density 7.86 g/cm3



-  Oxide is rust



-  Important in maintaining good health



-  Hemoglobins contain iron



-  Gives Mars red color



-  Considered to be very masculine



Density – Mass/Volume


Hogwarts is Here © 2024
HogwartsIsHere.com was made for fans, by fans, and is not endorsed or supported directly or indirectly with Warner Bros. Entertainment, JK Rowling, Wizarding World Digital, or any of the official Harry Potter trademark/right holders.
Powered by minerva-s