Alchemy 201 Notebook - Charlie Vidra
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