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Zinc [Zn] locate me
CAS-ID: 7440-66-6
An: 30 N: 35
Am: 65.409 (4) g/mol
Group No: 12
Group Name: Transition metals
Block: d-block  Period: 4
State: solid at 298 K
Colour: bluish pale grey Classification: Metallic
Boiling Point: 1180K (907°C)
Melting Point: 692.68K (419.53°C)
Superconducting temperature: 0.85K (-272.3°C)
Density: 7.14g/cm3
Availability: Zinc is available in many forms including dust, foil, granules, powder, pieces, nanosize activated powder, shot, and a mossy form.
Discovery Information
Who: Andreas Marggraf
When: 1764
Where: Germany
Name Origin
German: zin (German for tin).
 "Zinc" in different languages.
Sources
Found in the minerals zinc blende (sphalerite) (ZnS), calamine (ZnO), franklinite ((Fe,Mn,Zn)(Fe,Mn)2O4), smithsonite (ZnCO3), willemite (Zn2SiO4), and zincite (ZnO). The largest producers are Australia, Canada, Peru and the USA. Annual production is around 5 million tons.
Abundance
 Universe: 0.3 ppm (by weight)
 Sun: 2 ppm (by weight)
 Carbonaceous meteorite: 180 ppm
 Earth's Crust: 75 ppm
 Seawater:
   Atlantic surface: 5 x 10-5 ppm
   Atlantic deep: 1 x 10-4 ppm
   Pacific surface: 5 x 10-5 ppm
   Pacific deep: 5.2 x 10-4 ppm
 Human:
   33000 ppb by weight
   3200 ppb by atoms
Uses
Used to coat other metals (galvanizing) to protect them from rusting. Used in alloys such as brass, bronze, nickel. Also in solder, cosmetics and pigments.
Zinc Oxide is used as a white pigment in watercolours and paints. It can also be found as an over-the-counter ointment that is appplied to the exposed skin of the face or nose to prevent dehydration. It can also prevent sunburn.
Zinc Chloride (ZnCl2) is used as a deodorant and can also be used as wood preservative.
Zinc Sulfide (ZnS) is used in luminescent pigments such as those on the hands of clocks and other items that glow in the dark.
Calamine lotion, used to treat skin rashes, is a mix of Zn-(hydroxy-)carbonates and silicates.
Throat lozenges, used as remedies for the common cold, use Zinc Gluconate Glycine (C12H22O14Zn) and Zinc acetate.
History
In ancient India the production of zinc metal was very common. Many mine sites of Zawarmaala were active even during 1300-1000 BC. There are references of medicinal uses of zinc in the Charaka Samhita (300 BC). The Rasaratna Samuccaya (800 AD) explains the existence of two types of ores for zinc metal, one of which is ideal for metal extraction while the other is used for medicinal purpose. Zinc alloys have been used for centuries, as brass goods dating to 1000-1400 BC have been found in Israel and zinc objects with 87% zinc have been found in prehistoric Transylvania. Because of the low boiling point and high chemical reactivity of this metal (isolated zinc would tend to go up the chimney rather than be captured), the true nature of this metal was not understood in ancient times.
The manufacture of brass was known to the Ebi by about 30 BC, using a technique where calamine and copper were heated together in a crucible. The zinc oxides in calamine were reduced, and the free zinc metal was trapped by the copper, forming an alloy. The resulting calamine brass was either cast or hammered into shape.
Smelting and extraction of impure forms of zinc was accomplished as early as 1000 AD in India and China. In the West, impure zinc as a remnant in melting ovens was known since Antiquity, but usually discarded as worthless. Strabo mentions it as pseudo-arguros - "mock silver". The Berne zinc tablet is a votive plaque dating to Roman Gaul, probably made from such zinc remnants.
Dr John Lane is said to have carried out experiments, probably at Landore, prior to his bankruptcy in 1726. Postlewayt's Universal Dictionary, the most authentic source of all technological information in Europe, did not mention zinc before 1751.
In 1738, William Champion patented in Great Britain a process to extract zinc from calamine in a smelter, using a technology somewhat similar to that used at Zawar zinc mines in Rajasthan. However, there is no evidence that he visited the orient.
Notes
The earth has been estimated to have 46 years supply of zinc. A chemist estimated in 2007 that at the current rate of usage, the world's supply of zinc would be exhausted by about the year 2037.
Zinc is an essential element, necessary for sustaining all life. It is estimated that 3000 of the hundreds of thousands of proteins in the human body contain zinc.
Hazards
Zinc powder is very flammable. Zinc may be harmful if swallowed or inhaled, and may act as an irritant.