Title: F22 Raptor
1What is the link between
this
F22 Raptor fastest aircraft in the world its
true top speed is unknown
2 and this?
artificial hip replacements
3(No Transcript)
4Both the Raptor and hip replacement joints are
made from the metal
Titanium
Titanium is a transition metal where in the
Periodic Table would you find it?
5Titanium
6Properties of titanium
- VERY STRONG as strong as steel but 45 lighter
- RESISTS CORROSION more resistant to acids and
alkalis than aluminium, iron and magnesium
- LOW DENSITY so LIGHT and EASY TO SHAPE
- VERY HIGH MELTING POINT 1800oC
- CAN WITHSTAND EXTREMES OF TEMPERATURE when
ALLOYED with aluminium and vanadium
7Uses of titanium
- Its strength, light weight and resistance to
corrosion make titanium alloy a good material to
use in biomedical components e.g. hip replacements
8Its resistance to corrosion means titanium alloy
is used to make
- ship parts that would be exposed to seawater,
e.g. hulls and propeller shafts
- structural components in chemical plants
9Because of its strength combined with light
weight, titanium alloy is also used to make
military armour plated vehicles
Aircraft e.g. the Raptor
10Titanium alloy can withstand very high
temperatures so it is commonly used in structural
components in
11Extraction of titanium
- Titanium is not found as an element it is
extracted from its ore rutile in the Kroll process
- In rutile, titanium is found as titanium dioxide,
TiO2
12- Because titanium is more reactive than carbon, it
cannot be extracted in a blast furnace using
carbon
- Titanium dioxide is covalently bonded so cannot
be extracted from its ore by electrolysis
13- 99 of worlds titanium is produced by the Kroll
process
14Why dont we use titanium more often if it is so
useful?
- Titanium is the 4th most abundant metal on Earth,
after aluminium, iron and magnesium but it is
VERY EXPENSIVE
- Pure titanium costs 8,000 per tonne
- Titanium alloy costs 20,000 - 30,000 per tonne
- Compared to aluminium and steel alloys which cost
1,000 - 2,000 per tonne
15- Cleaner, quicker and cheaper method, the Fray
process, now developed in which electrolysis is
used to suck out the oxygen from titanium
dioxide, leaving a porous sponge of titanium metal
- Metals other than titanium now being extracted by
this process
- Process also allows alloys to be produced
directly from mixtures of oxides e.g. mixture of
TiO2 and Nb2O5 gives superconducting alloy NbTi