- Alternate uses: gold
(disambiguation)
|
|
| General |
| Name, Symbol, Number |
Gold, Au, 79 |
| Chemical series |
transition metals |
| Group, Period, Block |
11 (IB), 6 , d |
| Density, Hardness |
19300 kg/m3, 2.5 |
| Appearance |
Metallic yellow
|
| Atomic properties |
| Atomic weight |
196.96655 amu |
| Atomic radius (calc.) |
135 (174) pm |
| Covalent radius |
144 pm |
| van der Waals radius |
166 pm |
| Electron configuration |
[Xe]4f14 5d10
6s1 |
| e- 's per energy
level |
2, 8, 18, 32, 18, 1 |
| Oxidation states (Oxide) |
3, 1 (amphoteric) |
| Crystal structure |
Cubic face centered |
| Physical properties |
| State of matter |
solid (__) |
| Melting point |
1337.33 K (1947.52 °F) |
| Boiling point |
3129 K (5173 °F) |
| Molar volume |
10.21 ×10-6 m3/mol |
| Heat of vaporization |
334.4 kJ/mol |
| Heat of fusion |
12.55 kJ/mol |
| Vapor pressure |
0.000237 Pa at 1337 K |
| Speed of sound |
1740 m/s at 293.15 K |
| Miscellaneous |
| Electronegativity |
2.54 (Pauling scale) |
| Specific heat capacity |
128 J/(kg*K) |
| Electrical conductivity |
45.2 106/m ohm |
| Thermal conductivity |
317 W/(m*K) |
| 1st ionization potential |
890.1 kJ/mol |
| 2nd ionization potential |
1980 kJ/mol |
| Most stable isotopes |
|
|
| SI units & STP are used except where
noted. |
Gold is a chemical element in the periodic table that has the symbol Au (L. aurum) and atomic number 79. A soft, shiny, yellow, heavy, malleable, ductile (trivalent and univalent) transition metal, gold does not react with most chemicals but is attacked
by chlorine and aqua regia. The
metal occurs mainly uncombined as nuggets in rocks and alluvial
deposits and is one of the coinage metals.
Gold is used as a monetary standard for many nations and is also used
in jewelry, dentistry, and in
electronics. Its ISO currency
code is XAU.
Notable characteristics
Gold is a metallic element that exhibits a yellow color en masse but can be black, ruby, or purple when finely
divided. It is the most malleable and ductile metal known. In fact, 1 gram can be beaten
into a sheet 1 metre square or 1 ounce into 300 feet˛. A soft metal, gold is often alloyed with other metals to give it more
strength.
Gold is also a good conductor of heat and electricity and is not affected by air and most reagents. It is quite chemically
unalterable by heat, moisture, and most corrosive agents and therefore is well
suited for its use in coin and jewelry.
The color of solid gold as well as of the intensely colored, often purple, colloidal solutions that can be made from it is caused by the fact that the plasmon frequency of this element lies in the visible range, which causes red and yellow light to
be reflected and blue light to be absorbed. Native gold contains usually eight to ten per cent silver, but often much more. Natural alloys with a high silver content are called electrum. As the amount of silver increases, the color becomes whiter and the specific gravity lower.
Alloys with copper yield a redder metal, alloys with iron are green, aluminum alloys are purple. Jewelry made with
combinations of colored gold is sold in the western United States to the
tourist trade as Black Hills gold.
Common oxidation states of gold include +1 and +3.
Applications
Pure gold is too soft for ordinary use and is hardened by alloying with silver and
copper. Gold and its many alloys are most often used in jewelry, coinage and as a standard for monetary exchange in many countries. Because of its superior electrical
conductivity and resistance to corrosion and other desirable combinations of physical and chemical properties, gold also emerged
in the late 20th century as an essential industrial metal. Other uses:
- Gold performs critical functions in computers, communications equipment,
spacecraft, jet aircraft
engines, and a host of other products.
- The high electrical conductivity and resistance to oxidation of gold has led to its widespread use as thin layers electroplated on the surface of electrical connectors to ensure a good,
low-resistance connection.
- Like silver, gold can form a hard amalgam with mercury, and is sometimes used for
dental fillings.
- Colloidal gold (gold nanoparticles) is an intensely colored solution that is
currently studied in many labs for medical and biological applications. It is also the form used as gold paint on ceramics prior to firing.
- Chlorauric acid is used in photography for toning the silver image.
- Disodium aurothiomalate is a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis (administered
intramuscularly).
- The gold isotope Au-198, (half-life: 2.7 days) is used in some cancer treatments and for treating other diseases.
- Gold is used as a coating enabling biological material to be viewed under a scanning electron microscope.
- Many competitions and honors, such as the Olympics and the Nobel Prize, award a gold medal to the winner
(with silver to the second-place finisher, and bronze to the third.)
Since it is a good reflector of both infrared and visible light, it is used for the protective coatings on many artificial
satellites.
History
Gold (Sanskrit jval, Greek χρυσος = chrysos, Latin aurum, Anglo-Saxon
gold) has been known and highly valued since pre-historical times. Egyptian hieroglyphs from 2600 BC describe the metal and
gold is mentioned several times in the Old Testament. The European
exploration of the Americas was fueled in no small part by reports of the gold ornaments displayed in great profusion by Native American peoples, especially in Central, Peru, and Colombia.
Gold has long been considered one of the most precious metals, and
its value has been used as the standard for many currencies (known as the gold standard) in history. Gold has been used as a symbol for purity, value,
royalty, and particularly roles that combine these properties (see gold
album).
The primary goal of the alchemists was to produce gold from other substances, such
as lead — presumably by the interaction with a mythical substance called the philosopher's stone. Although they never succeeded in this attempt,
the alchemists promoted an interest in what can be done with substances, and this laid a foundation for today's chemistry. Thir symbol for gold was the circle with a point at its centre, which was also an astrological symbol of the sun.
During the 19th century gold
rushes occurred whenever large gold deposits were discovered, including the California, Colorado, Otago, Australia, Black Hills, and Klondike gold rushes. The largest gold
depository in the world is the U.S. Federal Reserve
Bank.
Value
Like other precious metals, gold is measured by troy weight and when it is
alloyed with other metals the term carat is used to indicate the amount of gold present
with 24 carats being pure gold. Historically gold was used to back currency in a system known as the gold standard in which one unit of currency was equivalent to a certain amount of
gold.
For a very long time the value of gold was set by the United States at $20.67 per troy ounce but in 1934 the value of gold was fixed at $35.00 per troy ounce. Because of a gold crisis, on March 17, 1968, a two-tiered pricing scheme was established whereby
gold was still used to settle international accounts at the old $35.00 per troy ounce ($1.13/g) but the price of gold on the
private market was allowed to fluctuate, this two-tiered pricing system was abandoned in 1975 when the price of gold was allowed
to fluctuate. Since 1968 the price of gold on the open market has widely fluctuated reaching $620/troy oz ($19.93/g). in January
1980 but later dropped to $410/troy oz ($13.18/g) by January 1990.
Because of its use as a reserve store of value, the possession of gold is sometimes restricted or banned. Within the United
States, the private possession of gold except as jewelry and coin collecting was banned between 1933 and 1975.
As a tangible investment gold is often held as part of a
portfolio because over the long term gold has an extensive history of maintaining its value. However, gold becomes particularly
desirable in times of extremely weak confidence and during hyperinflation because gold maintains its value even as fiat money becomes worthless.
Futures contracts based on gold
currently trade on the COMEX (Commodity Exchange) which is a subsidiary of the New York Mercantile Exchange. Speculation about the future price of gold and other
commodities are carried on here.
Occurrence
Due to its relative chemical inertness, gold often is found as the native metal, occasionally as large nuggets, but usually as
minute flakes in some minerals, quartz veins, slate, metamorphic rocks and in alluvial deposits that originated from these sources. Gold is widely
distributed, is very often associated with the minerals quartz or pyrite and is
combined with tellurium in the minerals petzite, calaverite and sylvanite. Gold is extracted from alluvium by techniques of placer mining.
Since the 1880s South Africa has been the source for about two-thirds of
the world's gold supply. The city of Johannesburg was built atop the
world's greatest gold finds. Gold fields in the Orange Free State
and the Transvaal were deep and require the world's deepest mines. The Boer War of 1899 - 1901 between the British and the white Boers was at least partly over the rights of miners and possession of the gold wealth in South Africa. Mines in
South Dakota and Nevada supply
two-thirds of gold used in the United States.
Gold is extracted from ores through the use of cyanide, amalgam, and smelting. Refining of the metal is frequently
accomplished by electrolysis. This metal occurs in sea water at 0.1 to 2
mg/ton depending on sample location. However,
as of 2004 there is no profitable method for recovering gold from sea
water.
Although gold is important to industry and the arts, it also retains a unique status among all commodities as a long-term
store of value. It has been estimated that all the gold in the world that has ever been refined could form a single cube 20 m (60 ft) on a side.
Compounds
Auric chloride (AuCl3) and chlorauric acid (HAuCl4) are the most common compounds of gold. Although gold is a noble metal it can form many compounds
Isotopes
There is only one stable isotope of gold, and 18 radioisotopes with Au-195 being the most stable with a half-life of 186 days.
Precautions
The human body does not absorb this metal well and compounds of gold are not normally very toxic. Liver and kidney damage has, however, been reported for up to 50% of
arthritis patients treated with gold-containing drugs.
Reference
External links
|