ALUMINIUM

DISCOVERED

Discovery date : 1825

Discovered by: Hans Oersted

Origin of the name: The name is derived from the Latin name for alum, 'alumen' meaning bitter salt.

Allotropes :






~>ALUMINIUM is a chemical element with symbol Al and atomic number 13. It is a silvery-white, soft, nonmagnetic, ductile metal in the boron group.


FACT BOX
Group 13 Melting point 660.323°C, 1220.581°F, 933.473 K
Period 3 Boiling point 2519°C, 4566°F, 2792 K
Block p Density (g cm−3) 2.70
Atomic number 13 Relative atomic mass 26.982
State at 20°C Solid Key isotopes 27Al
Electron configuration [Ne] 3s23p1 CAS number 7429-90-5
ChemSpider ID 4514248 ChemSpider is a free chemical structure database

ELEMENTS and PERIODIC TABLE HISTORY

The analysis of a curious metal ornament found in the tomb of Chou-Chu, a military leader in 3rd century China, turned out to be 85% aluminium. How it was produced remains a mystery. By the end of the 1700s, aluminium oxide was known to contain a metal, but it defeated all attempts to extract it. Humphry Davy had used electric current to extract sodium and potassium from their so-called ‘earths’ (oxides), but his method did not release aluminium in the same way. The first person to produce it was Hans Christian Oersted at Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1825, and he did it by heating aluminium chloride with potassium. Even so, his sample was impure. It fell to the German chemist Friedrich Wöhler to perfect the method in 1827, and obtain pure aluminium for the first time by using sodium instead of potassium.