Aluminum Copper Alloy
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| Product | Product Code | SAFETY DATA | Technical data | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Al-46% Cu-54% |
AL-CU-01-P.46AL | SDS > | Data Sheet > | |
Al-50% Cu-50% |
AL-CU-01-P.50CU | SDS > | Data Sheet > | |
Al-67% Cu-33% |
AL-CU-01-P.33CU | SDS > | Data Sheet > | |
Al-80% Cu-20% |
AL-CU-01-P.20CU | SDS > | Data Sheet > | |
Aluminum Copper Alloy |
AL-CU-01 | SDS > | Data Sheet > |
| Compound Formula | Al/Cu |
|---|---|
| Appearance | Reddish metallic solid in various forms (sheets, spheres, ingot, rod, pieces, sputtering target, powder) |
| Melting Point | 548 °C |
| Boiling Point | N/A |
| Density | N/A |
| Solubility in H2O | N/A |
| Exact Mass | 89.911 g/mol |
| Monoisotopic Mass | 89.911 g/mol |
| Signal Word | N/A |
|---|---|
| Hazard Statements | N/A |
| Hazard Codes | N/A |
| Risk Codes | N/A |
| Safety Statements | N/A |
| Transport Information | NONH for all modes of transport |
| Linear Formula | Al-Cu |
|---|---|
| Pubchem CID | 10197627 |
| MDL Number | MFCD00213972 |
| EC No. | N/A |
| IUPAC Name | aluminum; copper |
| Beilstein/Reaxys No. | |
| SMILES | [Al].[Cu] |
| InchI Identifier | InChI=1S/Al.Cu |
| InchI Key | WPPDFTBPZNZZRP-UHFFFAOYSA-N |
| Chemical Formula | |
| Molecular Weight | |
| Standard InchI | |
| Appearance | |
| Melting Point | |
| Boiling Point | |
| Density |
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Each business day American Elements' scientists & engineers post their choice for the most exciting materials science news of the day
See more Aluminum products. Aluminum (or Aluminium) (atomic symbol: Al, atomic number: 13) is a Block P, Group 13, Period 3 element with an atomic weight of 26.9815386. It is the third most abundant element in the earth's crust and the most abundant metallic element.
Aluminum's name is derived from alumina, the mineral from which Sir Humphrey Davy attempted to refine it from in 1812. Aluminum was first predicted by Antoine Lavoisier 1787 and first isolated by Hans Christian Øersted in 1825. Aluminum is a silvery gray metal that possesses many desirable characteristics. It is light, nonmagnetic and non-sparking. It stands second among metals in the scale of malleability, and sixth in ductility. It is extensively used in many industrial applications where a strong, light, easily constructed material is needed.
Although it has only 60% of the electrical conductivity of copper, it is used in electrical transmission lines because of its light weight. Pure aluminum is soft and lacks strength, but alloyed with small amounts of copper, magnesium, silicon, manganese, or other elements, it imparts a variety of useful properties.
See more Copper products.
Copper (atomic symbol: Cu, atomic number: 29) is a Block D, Group 11, Period 4 element with an atomic weight of 63.546. The number of electrons in each of copper's shells is 2, 8, 18, 1 and its electron configuration is [Ar]3d10 4s1. The copper atom has a radius of 128 pm and a Van der Waals radius of 186 pm. Copper was first discovered by Early Man prior to 9000 BC. In its elemental form, copper has a reddish-orange metallic and lustrous appearance. Of all pure metals, only silver
has a higher electrical conductivity. The origin of the word copper comes from the Latin word 'cuprium' which translates as "metal of Cyprus," as the Mediterranean island of Cyprus was known as an ancient source of mined copper.
