
Tin ore
'Tin' is a
chemical element in the
periodic table that has the symbol 'Sn' () and
atomic number 50. This silvery, malleable
poor metal that is not easily
oxidized in air and resists
corrosion is found in many
alloys and is used to coat other metals to prevent corrosion. Tin is obtained chiefly from the
mineral cassiterite, where it occurs as an
oxide. It can be
alloyed with
copper to make
bronze.
Notable characteristics
Tin is a malleable, ductile, highly
crystalline, silvery-white
metal; when a bar of tin is bent, a strange crackling sound known as the "tin cry" can be heard due to the breaking of the crystals. This metal resists corrosion from
distilled, sea and soft
tap water, but can be attacked by strong
acids,
alkalis, and by
acid salts. Tin acts as a
catalyst when
oxygen is in solution and helps accelerate chemical attack.
Tin forms the dioxide SnO
2 when it is heated in the presence of
air. SnO
2, in turn, is feebly acidic and forms stannate (SnO
3-2) salts with
basic oxides. Tin can be highly polished and is used as a protective coat for other metals in order to prevent corrosion or other chemical action. This metal combines directly with
chlorine and oxygen and displaces
hydrogen from dilute acids. Tin is malleable at ordinary temperatures but is brittle when it is heated.
Allotropes
Tin's chemical properties fall between those of metals and non-metals, just as the semiconductors
silicon and
germanium do. Tin has two
allotropes at normal pressure and temperature: gray tin and white tin.
Below 13.2 °
C, it exists as ''gray'' or alpha tin, which has a cubic
crystal structure similar to
silicon and
germanium. Gray tin has no metallic properties at all, is a dull-gray powdery material, and has few uses, other than a few specialized
semiconductor applications.
When warmed above 13.2 °C tin changes into ''white'' or beta tin, which is metallic and has a tetragonal structure. Converting gray tin powder into white tin produces white tin powder. To convert powdery gray tin into solid white tin the temperature must be raised above the melting point of tin.
Gray tin can cause undesirable effects in applications where the metallic properties of tin are important, since metallic ''white tin'' will slowly convert to gray tin if it is held for a long time below 13.2 °Celsius. The metallic surface of white tin becomes covered with a gray powder which is easily rubbed off. The gray patches slowly expand until all of the tin in the object is converted from the metal to the powder, at which point it loses its structural integrity and may fall to pieces. This process is known as ''tin disease'' or ''
tin pest''. Tin pest was a particular problem in northern
Europe in the 18th century as
organ pipes made of tin would sometimes completely disintegrate during long cold winters. Some sources also say that during
Napoleon's Russian campaign of 1812, the temperatures became so cold that the tin buttons on the soldiers' uniforms disintegrated, contributing to the defeat of the Grande Armée. However, the veracity of this story is debatable, because Napoleon would likely have foreseen this problem, and the transformation to gray tin often takes a reasonably long time.
[1] This transformation, however, may be prevented by the addition of
antimony or
bismuth.
Applications
Tin bonds readily to
iron, and has been used for coating
lead or zinc and
steel to prevent
corrosion. Tin-plated
steel containers are widely used for
food preservation, and this forms a large part of the market for metallic tin. Speakers of British English call them "tins"; Americans call them "
cans" or "tin cans". One thus-derived use of the slang term "
tinnie" or "tinny" means "can of beer". The
tin whistle is so called because it was first mass-produced in tin-plated steel.
Other uses:
★ Some important tin
alloys are:
bronze,
bell metal,
Babbitt metal,
die casting alloy,
pewter,
phosphor bronze, soft
solder, and
White metal.
★ The most important salt formed is
stannous chloride, which has found use as a reducing agent and as a
mordant in the calico printing process. Electrically conductive coatings are produced when tin salts are sprayed onto
glass. These coatings have been used in panel lighting and in the production of frost-free
windshields.
★ Most metal pipes in a
pipe organ are made of varying amounts of a tin/lead alloy, with 50%/50% being the most common. The amount of tin in the pipe defines the pipe's tone, since tin is the most tonally resonant of all metals. When a tin/lead alloy cools, the lead cools slightly faster and makes a mottled or spotted effect. This metal alloy is referred to as spotted metal.
★ Window glass is most often made via floating molten
glass on top of molten tin (creating
float glass) in order to make a flat surface (this is called the "
Pilkington process").
★ Tin is also used in
solders for joining
pipes or
electric circuits, in
bearing alloys, in glass-making, and in a wide range of tin chemical applications. Although of higher melting point than a
lead-tin alloy, the use of pure tin or tin alloyed with other metals in these applications is rapidly supplanting the use of the previously common lead–containing alloys in order to eliminate the problems of toxicity caused by lead.
★ Tin foil was once a common wrapping material for foods and drugs; replaced in the early 20th century by the use of
aluminium foil, which is now commonly referred to as ''tin foil''. Hence one use of the slang term "
tinnie" or "tinny" for a small retail package of a drug such as
cannabis or for a can of beer.
Tin becomes a
superconductor below 3.72
K. In fact, tin was one of the first superconductors to be studied; the
Meissner effect, one of the characteristic features of superconductors, was first discovered in superconducting tin crystals. The
niobium-tin compound
Nb3Sn is commercially used as wires for
superconducting magnets, due to the material's high
critical temperature (18 K) and critical magnetic field (25
T). A superconducting magnet weighing only a couple of
kilograms is capable of producing magnetic fields comparable to a conventional
electromagnet weighing tons.
History
Tin (
Old English: ''tin'',
Old Latin: ''plumbum candidum'',
Old German: ''tsin'',
Late Latin: ''stannum'') is one of the earliest metals known and was used as a component of
bronze from antiquity. Because of its hardening effect on
copper, tin was used in bronze implements as early as
3,500 BC. Tin mining is believed to have started in
Cornwall and
Devon (esp.
Dartmoor) in Classical times, and a thriving tin trade developed with the civilizations of the
Mediterranean[2][3]. However the lone metal was not used until about
600 BC. The last Cornish Tin Mine, at
South Crofty near
Camborne closed in 1998 bringing 4,000 years of mining in Cornwall to an end.
The word "tin" has cognates in many Germanic and Celtic languages. The American Heritage Dictionary speculates that the word was borrowed from a pre-Indo-European language. The later name "stannum" and its
Romance derivatures come from the lead-silver alloy of the same name for the finding of the latter in ores; the former "stagnum" was the word for a stale pool or puddle.
In modern times, the word "tin" is often improperly used as a generic phrase for any silvery metal that comes in sheets. Most everyday materials that are commonly called "tin", such as
aluminum foil,
beverage cans, corrugated building sheathing and
tin cans, are actually made of
steel or
aluminum, although tin cans (tinned cans) do contain a thin coating of tin to inhibit rust. Likewise, so-called "tin
toys" are usually made of steel, and may or may not have a coating of tin to inhibit rust.
Occurrence

Tin output in 2005
In 2005, China was the largest producer of tin, with at least one-third of the world's share, closely followed by
Indonesia and South America, reports the
British Geological Survey.
Tin is produced by reducing the
ore with
coal in a
reverberatory furnace. This metal is a relatively scarce element with an abundance in the
Earth's
crust of about 2
ppm, compared with 94 ppm for zinc, 63 ppm for copper, and 12 ppm for lead. Most of the world's tin is produced from
placer deposits. The only
mineral of commercial importance as a source of tin is
cassiterite (Sn
O2), although small quantities of tin are recovered from complex
sulfides such as
stannite,
cylindrite,
franckeite,
canfieldite, and
teallite. Secondary, or scrap, tin is also an important source of the metal.
Tasmania hosts some deposits of historical importance, most notably
Mount Bischoff and
Renison Bell.
''see also ''
Isotopes
Main articles: isotopes of tin
Tin is the element with the greatest number of stable isotopes (ten), which is probably related to the fact that 50 is a "
magic number" of protons. 28 additional unstable isotopes are known, including the "
doubly magic" tin-100 (
100Sn) (discovered in 1994)
[4].
Compounds
For discussion of Stannate compounds (SnO
32-) see
Stannate. For Stannite (SnO
2-) see
Stannite. See also
Stannous hydroxide (Sn(OH)
2),
Stannic acid (Stannic Hydroxide - Sn(OH)
4),
Tin dioxide (Stannic Oxide - SnO
2),
Tin(II) oxide (Stannous Oxide - SnO),
Tin(II) chloride (SnCl
2),
Tin(IV) chloride (SnCl
4)
''see also ''
Biologic effects
Elemental tin is an
essential nutrient, needed in very small amounts. The small amount of tin that is found in canned foods is not harmful to humans.
Certain organic tin compounds,
organotin, such as triorganotins (see
tributyltin oxide) are toxic and are used as industrial
fungicides and
bactericides.
In Popular Culture
In many games (especially RPGs, which involve stat building or skills), tin is used in either forging items or being melted into bronze by combining it with
copper. Tin can be found put to use in most games where items (especially armor and weapons) can be made by characters, being that copper and bronze were two of the earliest important forms of weapons and armor (especially noted in wars in an Ancient
Mesopotamia during early civilization). Tin is also referenced in the web comic "
xkcd", when a character is offered a "Snapple", which turns out to be an apple made of tin (making reference to the elemental symbol of tin, Sn).
See also
★
International Tin Council
★
Tinning
★
Cassiterides
★
Tin pest
★
Whisker (metallurgy) (tin whiskers)
References
1. Le Coureur, Penny, and Jay Burreson. ''Napoleon's Buttons: 17 Molecules that Changed History''. New York: Penguin Group USA, 2004.
2. Why Claudius invaded Britain
3. The Romano-British Amphora Trade to 43 A.D: An Overview
4. Doubly Magic Discovery of Tin-100, Phil Walker, , , PHYSICS WORLD, 1994
★
Los Alamos National Laboratory: Tin
External links
★
WebElements.com – Tin
★
Theodore Gray's Wooden Periodic Table Table: Tin samples and castings