Alloys of d-Block Elements | chemca

Alloys of d-Block Elements | chemca
Inorganic Chemistry

Important Alloys of d-Block Elements

Why they form, Composition, and Applications.

By chemca Team • Updated Jan 2026

An alloy is a homogeneous mixture of a metal with other metals or non-metals. Transition metals are known for their ability to form alloys because they have similar atomic sizes (radii within 15% of each other). This allows atoms of one metal to easily replace atoms of another in the crystal lattice.

1. Why Transition Metals form Alloys?

Substitutional Solid Solutions

  • Similar Atomic Radii: The atomic radii of transition metals in a series are very close to each other.
  • Lattice Substitution: Atoms of one transition metal can easily take up positions in the crystal lattice of another.
  • Properties: The resulting alloys are harder, have higher melting points, and are more resistant to corrosion than the parent metals.

2. Alloys of Copper

Common Copper Alloys

Name Composition Properties & Uses
Brass $Cu (60-80\%) + Zn (20-40\%)$ Malleable, ductile, resistant to corrosion. Used in utensils, cartridges, condenser tubes.
Bronze $Cu (75-90\%) + Sn (10-25\%)$ Harder than copper, corrosion resistant. Used in statues, coins, medals, ship propellers.
German Silver $Cu (50\%) + Zn (24\%) + Ni (24\%)$ Contains 0% Silver. Silvery appearance. Used in utensils, resistance coils, ornaments.
Gun Metal $Cu (87\%) + Sn (10\%) + Zn (3\%)$ Very hard, resists corrosion. Used in gears, castings, bearings.

3. Alloys of Iron (Steels)

Ferrous Alloys

Pure iron is soft. Alloying with Carbon and transition metals drastically improves properties.

Name Composition Properties & Uses
Stainless Steel $Fe + Cr (12-20\%) + Ni (2-10\%) + C$ Resistant to corrosion (Rust-proof). Used in cutlery, surgical instruments, automobile parts.
Invar $Fe (64\%) + Ni (36\%)$ Very low coefficient of thermal expansion. Used in pendulums, measuring tapes.
Tungsten Steel $Fe + W (14-20\%) + C$ Extremely hard even at high temps. Used in high-speed cutting tools.
Manganese Steel $Fe + Mn (10-15\%) + C$ Very tough and resistant to wear. Used in railway tracks, rock crushers, safes.

4. Special Purpose Alloys

1. Nichrome:
Composition: $Ni (60\%) + Cr (40\%) + Fe (\text{trace})$
Use: High electrical resistance and high melting point. Used in heating elements (toasters, irons).
2. Alnico:
Composition: $Al + Ni + Co + Fe$
Use: Highly magnetic. Used to make powerful Permanent Magnets.
3. Constantan:
Composition: $Cu (60\%) + Ni (40\%)$
Use: Electrical resistance wire (Thermocouples).
4. Amalgams:
Alloys of Mercury (Hg) with other metals (like Na, Zn, Au, Ag).
Use: Dental fillings ($Ag-Hg$), Reducing agents ($Zn-Hg, Na-Hg$). Note: Iron ($Fe$) does not form amalgam.
5. 18-Carat Gold:
Composition: $Au (75\%) + Cu/Ag (25\%)$
Use: Jewelry (Pure 24K gold is too soft).

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