Metals

1 min read Last updated Mon Jun 01 2026 03:58:53 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Generally isotropic, and crystalline. Can be made amorphous by melting and then suddenly cooling a sample. Metals can be categorized into 2 types.

Pure Metals

Inter-molecular bonds: Metallic bonds. Commonly not used in the pure form.

Pure metals might be:

Alloys

Which contain more than one metallic element.

Examples:

  • Steel [Fe+C][\ce{Fe}+\ce{C}]
  • Cast Iron [Fe+C][\ce{Fe}+\ce{C}]
  • Brass [Cu+Zn][\ce{Cu}+\ce{Zn}]
  • Bronze [Cu+Sn][\ce{Cu}+\ce{Sn}]
  • Gold jewelry [Au+Cu][\ce{Au}+\ce{Cu}]
  • Duralumin [Al+Cu][\ce{Al}+\ce{Cu}] - used for aircraft body
  • Stainless steel [Fe+C+Cr+Ni][\ce{Fe}+\ce{C}+\ce{Cr}+\ce{Ni}],
  • Cast iron [Fe+C][\ce{Fe}+\ce{C}]

Alloys have a parent metal (mostly used metal, percentage-wise) and one or more alloying elements (all elements other than parent metal).

Super Alloys

Alloys containing too many alloying elements (maybe even 20).

Properties

  • Fe,Co,Ni\ce{Fe}, \ce{Co}, \ce{Ni}, and their alloys are magnetic
  • Good electrical conductivity
  • Good thermal conductivity
  • High strength
  • High stiffness (= high young’s modulus)
  • Good ductility
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