Facts About Tin (2024)

Facts About Tin (1)

Tin is an element perhaps best known for its use in tin cans — which, these days, are almost always actually aluminum. Even the original tin cans, first introduced in the 1800s, were mostly steel, plated with tin.

So tin may be unassuming, but it's not unimportant. This metal is used to prevent corrosion and to produce glass. It's most often found mixed, or alloyed, with other metals. Pewter, for example, is mostly tin.

Sources of tin

Tin is relatively rare, making up only about 2 parts per million of the Earth's crust, according to the U.S. Geologic Survey. Tin is extracted from various ores, chiefly from Cassiterite (SnO2). The metal is produced from reducing the oxide ore with coal in a furnace.

Very little tin has been found in theUnited States, much of it in Alaska and California. According to Los Alamos National Laboratory, the metal is mainly produced in Malaya, Bolivia, Indonesia, Zaire, Thailand and Nigeria.

Uses of tin

Perhaps the most important use of tin, historically, has been to make bronze — an alloy ofcopperand tin or other metals — that changed civilization by ushering in the Bronze Age. People began making or trading for bronze tools and weapons at different times, depending on geography, but the Bronze Age is commonly accepted to have started around 3300 B.C. in the Near East.

Just the facts

According to the Jefferson National Linear Accelerator Laboratory, the properties of tin are:

  • Atomic number (number of protons in the nucleus): 50
  • Atomic symbol (on the Periodic Table of Elements): Sn
  • Atomic weight (average mass of the atom): 118.710
  • Density: 7.287 grams per cubic centimeter
  • Phase at room temperature: Solid
  • Melting point: 449.47 degrees Fahrenheit (231.93 degrees Celsius)
  • Boiling point: 4,715 F (2,602 C)
  • Number of isotopes (atoms of the same element with a different number of neutrons): 51, 8 stable
  • Most common isotopes: Sn-112 (natural abundance 0.97 percent), Sn-114 (0.66 percent), Sn-115 (0.34 percent), Sn-116 (14.54 percent), Sn-117 (7.68 percent), Sn-118 (24.22 percent), Sn-119 (8.59 percent), Sn-120 (32.58 percent), Sn-122 (4.63 percent) and Sn-124 (5.79 percent)

Facts About Tin (2)

An old metal

Tin's use in bronze stretches back some 5,000 years. It has also appeared occasionally in the archaeological record on its own. For example, researchers excavating at the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem in 2011 discovered a button-sized piece of tin stamped with the Aramaic words for "pure for God." This seal may have been used to mark ceremonially pure objects for rituals, according to a report in theHaaretz Newspaper.

Beyond bronze, tin's greatest contribution to humankind was probably the humble tin can. The can had its origins in the perennial problem of how to feed an on-the-move army. According to the Can Manufacturers Institute (yes, even cans have a trade organization), Napoleon Bonaparte offered a reward in 1795 to anyone who could come up with a way to preserve food for military use. In 1810, French chef Nicolas Appert won the 12,000-franc prize by inventing canning — the process of sealing food or drink in a jar or bottle with the use of boiling water.

This discovery cleared the way for the invention of the tin can only a year later. In 1810, British merchant Peter Durand got a patent for using tinplated steel to can food. Tin resists corrosion, making it an ideal covering for relatively cheap steel.

The tin can arrived on American shores in 1818, and Thomas Kensett & Co, a manufacturing company, patented the tin can in America in 1825. The Civil War prompted the increased popularity of the tin can, as generals once again searched for a way to feed their soldiers.

Tin's heyday ended in the mid-20thcentury, however, when Coors Brewery introduced thefirst aluminum can. Cheaper, lighter and recyclable, aluminum rapidly overtook tin and steel.

But tin still has its uses. Tin plus the elementniobiummakes a superconductive metal used for wire. A tin/lead alloy is used to make solder. Copper and other metals are mixed with tin to make pewter, which was once a common metal for tableware. And window glass gets its silky smooth surface from a mold of molten tin, a method called thePilkington process.

Who knew?

  • Those goldOscar statuettesaren't solid gold. They're actually Britannia metal plated with gold. And Britannia metal is made ofapproximately 92 percent tin(the rest is copper and antimony).
  • Sn? Shouldn't tin's atomic symbol be Tn instead? Actually, Sn is short for the Latin word for tin,stannum.
  • When tin is bent at room temperature, it makes ahigh-pitched creaking soundknown as the "tin cry," caused by the deformation of tin crystals.
  • Below 13 degrees Celsius, tin turns into a form called "alpha-tin." This powdery grey tin is an allotrope, a different form of the element. Alpha tin is a semiconductor, but is difficult to make,according to chemist Andrea Sellaof University College London.

Current research

Recently, tech researchers have gotten excited aboutgraphene, a single-atom layer of carbon that is both harder than diamonds and stretchable like rubber. It's entirely possible that the next high-tech advance like graphene will come from humble tin.

Researchers are Stanford University and the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have invented a one-atom-thick layer of tin they're calling stanene.

Stanene is special because it is the first material able to conduct electricity with 100 percent efficiency at room temperature. The addition of a fewfluorineatoms maintains this efficiency up to and beyond the temperatures at which computer chips operate — up to about 212 F (100 C).

"According to Moore's law, the number of transistors in a dense integrated circuit has doubled approximately every two years," study researcher Yong Xu, now a physicist at Tsinghua University in Beijing, told Live Science. "As a consequence, the power density of integrated circuits increases exponentially, leading to serious problems of power consumption and heat dissipation."

Xu and his team, including physicist Shoucheng Zhang at Stanford, knew they needed a heavy element with the properties of a so-called "topological insulator." A topological insulator is a material that conducts electricity along its surface, but does not conduct electricity in its interior.

"Many topological insulators have been fabricated by heavy elements including mercury, bismuth, antimony, tellurium and selenium," Xu said. "None of them were perfect conductors of electricity at room temperature."

Tin hadn't been studied for this purpose before. But Xu and his colleagues found that when tin atoms are arranged in a single, honeycomb layer, the elements' properties change. It becomes a perfect conductor of electricity at room temperature, with not a single stray electron lost, the researchers reported in November 2014.

Electronics made with stanene should thus produce less heat and draw less power than their silicon counterparts.

Xu and his collaborators made the single-layer tin with a process called molecular beam epitaxy, which condenses gaseous versions of the element in a thin layer inside a vacuum. It's a challenging process, Xu said, requiring exact temperatures and growth speed of the layer to ensure the atomic structure is just right. The team hopes to develop cheaper and easier ways to make stanene in the future.

"The next step is to grow high-quality stanene samples on the large scale and then use the material for fundamental research and practical applications," Xu said.

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Facts About Tin (3)

Live Science Contributor

Stephanie Pappas is a contributing writer for Live Science, covering topics ranging from geoscience to archaeology to the human brain and behavior. She was previously a senior writer for Live Science but is now a freelancer based in Denver, Colorado, and regularly contributes to Scientific American and The Monitor, the monthlymagazine of the American Psychological Association. Stephanie received a bachelor's degree in psychology from the University of South Carolina and a graduate certificate in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Facts About Tin (2024)

FAQs

What are 5 uses of tin? ›

Most tin is utilised as an alloy with other metals like lead or zinc or as a protective coating. Tin is used in glass production, bearing alloys, coatings for steel containers, solders for connecting pipes or electrical/electronic circuits, and other tin chemical use.

What makes tin important? ›

Tin has many uses. It takes a high polish and is used to coat other metals to prevent corrosion, such as in tin cans, which are made of tin-coated steel. Alloys of tin are important, such as soft solder, pewter, bronze and phosphor bronze.

Why is tin so stable? ›

A nucleus with 50 protons (tin) has a magic number, which means that it has a complete proton shell; this contributes significantly to the stability of its isotopes. The even number of protons in tin also allows for a more stable balance with neutrons, resulting in more stable isotopes.

How hot can tin get? ›

Tin melts at about 232 °C (450 °F), the lowest in group 14. The melting point is further lowered to 177.3 °C (351.1 °F) for 11 nm particles. β-tin, also called white tin, is the allotrope (structural form) of elemental tin that is stable at and above room temperature.

How rare is tin? ›

Tin is a relatively scarce element with an abundance in the earth's crust of about 2 parts per million (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; at least one-half comes from Southeast Asia.

Is tin flammable? ›

FIRE HAZARDS

* Tin is a noncombustible solid, however Tin in powder form may ignite. * Use dry chemical powder for fires involving Tin powder.

How did tin get its name? ›

Origin of name : from the Anglo-Saxon word "tin" (the origin of the symbol Sn comes from the Latin word "stannum" meaning "tin").

Where can tin be found? ›

Tin is found principally in the ore cassiterite (tin(IV) oxide). It is mainly found in the 'tin belt' stretching through China, Thailand and Indonesia. It is also mined in Peru, Bolivia and Brazil. It is obtained commercially by reducing the ore with coal in a furnace.

Is tin rarer than gold? ›

Precious metals are generally defined as rare, valuable, and often used as a store of value or for investment purposes. Tin is relatively abundant in the Earth's crust compared to precious metals, and its value is typically lower.

How old is tin? ›

3500 BCE. In 3500 B.C. tin was first mined and processed in Turkey. Ancient metalworkers learned to combine relatively soft copper with tin to form a much harder bronze, which could be made into tools and weapons that were more durable and stayed sharp longer.

What is tin made of? ›

Tin is a chemical element with the symbol Sn on the periodic table and atomic number 50. It is a silver-white, malleable, and relatively soft metal. Tin ore is typically found in nature in the form of minerals like cassiterite (tin dioxide), which is the primary source of commercially mined tin.

Why is tin so expensive? ›

Since the early 2000s, tin has been in a steady supply deficit whereby the mines around the world have barely been able to produce enough refined tin to keep up with the demand for the electronics solder, tinplate, and tin chemicals used in the production of PVC plastics.

What color is tin? ›

tin (Sn), a chemical element belonging to the carbon family, Group 14 (IVa) of the periodic table. It is a soft, silvery white metal with a bluish tinge, known to the ancients in bronze, an alloy with copper. Tin is widely used for plating steel cans used as food containers, in metals used for bearings, and in solder.

Is tin a good metal? ›

One of the most common metals used today, either on its own or in a mixture of other metals, is tin. There are a range of reasons for its popularity. For one, it can be found extremely easily in every part of the world. It has the strength of steel while still offering great flexibility.

Why was tin so valuable? ›

Tin was lightweight, inexpensive, easy to clean, nontoxic and durable. As long as its coating remained intact, it resisted corrosion and had a pleasing silvery appearance.

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