Friday, July 19, 2019
Chromium :: essays research papers
 Chromium      Chromium is a very hard, brittle, gray metal, which is sometimes  referred to as Siberian red lead. It does not rust easily and becomes shiny and  bright when it is polished. The shiny trim on our automobile bumpers and door  handles is usually electroplated chromium.  Most chromium comes from something called chromite which is a mixture  of chromium , iron, and oxygen. Chromite is a common rather ordinary black  mineral that no one really noticed until more recent times. Nearly all the  world's supply of chromite comes from Zimbabwe, Russia, Turkey, South Africa,  Cuba, and the Philippines. The United States imports almost all its chromite.  Chromium is added to other metals to make them harder and more  resistant to chemicals. Small quantities mixed with steel make the metal  stainless. Stainless steel is used to make cutlery and kitchen equipment  because it does not rust easily and takes a mirror-like polish. This steel  contains about 13 percent chromium and 0.3 percent carbon. The hardness of steel  can be increased by adding small quantities of chromium to it. Chromium steel  alloys (mixtures containing one or more metals) are used to make armor plating  for tanks and warships. They are also used for ball bearings and the hard  cutting edges of high-speed machine tools.  Nickel is highly resistant to electric current and is often added to  chromium steels to make them easier to work. For example, stainless steel  sinks can be pressed out from flat sheets of steel that can contain 18 percent  chomium and 8 percent nickel.  When nickel is mixed with chromium, the resulting metal can stand  very high temperatures without corroding. For example, the heating elements of  toasters can be made from an alloy that is 80 percent nickel and 20 percent  chromium. This metal operates at a temperature of about 1380 degrees  Fahrenheit (750 degrees Celsius).  Chromium was discovered in 1798 by the French chemist Nicolas  Vauquelin. He chose the name chromium from the Greek word chroma, which means  color. Chromium was a good choice of name, many chromium compounds are brightly  colored. Rubies are red and emeralds are green because they contain chromium  compounds.  Some of the brightest colors in the artist's palette contain chromium.  Chrome yellow is made from a substance which contains chromium, lead, and  oxygen. Zinc yellow contains zinc, chromium and oxygen. Chrome red is another  chromium compound. Chrome green is used in paints and in printing cotton    					    
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