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-   -   The Beryllium Thread (https://chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=157069)

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 12:56 AM

The rising demand for hard beryllium-copper alloys and fluorescent material for fluorescent lights during World War II caused the production of beryllium to soar.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 12:56 AM

In the first years most fluorescent lights used zinc orthosilicate with varying content of beryllium as greenish phosphor.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:00 AM

Small additions of magnesium tungstate improved the blue part of the spectrum yielding acceptable white.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:00 AM

After it was discovered that beryllium was toxic halophosphate based phosphors took over.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:00 AM

[27]
[edit]Etymology

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:00 AM

The name beryllium comes

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:01 AM

(via Latin: Beryllus and French: Béryl) from the Greek βήρυλλος, bērullos, beryl, from Prakrit veruliya (वॆरुलिय*), from Pāli veḷuriya (वेलुरिय); veḷiru (भेलिरु) or, viḷar (भिलर्), "to become pale," in reference to the pale semiprecious gemstone beryl.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:01 AM

The original source of the word "Beryllium" is the Sanskrit word:

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:02 AM

वैडूर्य vaidurya-, which is of Dravidian origin and could be derived from the name of the modern city of Belur.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:02 AM

[28] For about 160 years, beryllium was also known as glucinum or glucinium (with the accompanying chemical symbol "Gl"[29]), the name coming from the Greek word for sweet:

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:02 AM

γλυκυς, due to the sweet taste of its salts. The salts are toxic, though, so this is a dangerous practice.
[edit]

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:02 AM

Applications

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:03 AM

It is estimated that most beryllium is used for military applications, so information is not readily available.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:03 AM

[30]
[edit]Radiation windows

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:03 AM

Beryllium target which "converts" a proton beam into a neutron beam

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:04 AM

A square beryllium foil mounted in a steel case to be used as a window between a vacuum chamber and an X-ray microscope.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:04 AM

Beryllium is highly transparent to X-rays owing to its low atomic number.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:05 AM

Because of its low atomic number and very low absorption for X-rays, the oldest and still one of the most important applications of beryllium is in radiation windows for X-ray tubes.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:05 AM

Extreme demands are placed on purity and cleanliness of Be to avoid artifacts in the X-ray images.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:06 AM

Thin beryllium foils are used as radiation windows for X-ray detectors, and the extremely low absorption minimizes the heating effects caused by high intensity, low energy X-rays typical of synchrotron radiation.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:07 AM

Vacuum-tight windows and beam-tubes for radiation experiments on synchrotrons are manufactured exclusively from beryllium. In scientific setups for various X-ray emission studies (e.g., energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy) the sample holder is usually made of beryllium because its emitted X-rays have much lower energies (~100 eV) than X-rays from most studied materials.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:07 AM

[3]
Because of its low atomic number beryllium is almost transparent to energetic particles.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:07 AM

Therefore it is used to build the beam pipe around the collision region in collider particle physics experiments.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:07 AM

Notably all four main detector experiments at the Large Hadron Collider accelerator (ALICE, ATLAS, CMS, LHCb) use a beryllium beam-pipe.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:08 AM

[31]
Also many high-energy particle physics collision experiments such as the Large Hadron Collider, the Tevatron, the SLAC and others contain beam pipes made of beryllium. Beryllium's low density allows collision products to reach the surrounding detectors without significant interaction, its stiffness allows a powerful vacuum to be produced within the pipe to minimize interaction with gases, its thermal stability allows it to function correctly at temperatures of only a few degrees above absolute zero, and its diamagnetic nature keeps it from interfering with the complex multipole magnet systems used to steer and focus the particle beams.[32]
[edit]Mechanical applications
Because of its stiffness, light weight and dimensional stability over a wide temperature range, beryllium metal is used for lightweight structural components in the defense and aerospace industries in high-speed aircraft, missiles, space vehicles and communication satellites. Several liquid-fuel rockets use nozzles of pure beryllium.[33][34]
Beryllium is used as an alloying agent in the production of beryllium copper, which contains up to 2.5% beryllium. Beryllium-copper alloys are used in many applications because of their combination of high electrical and thermal conductivity, high strength and hardness, nonmagnetic properties, along with good corrosion and fatigue resistance. These applications include the making of spot welding electrodes, springs, non-sparking tools and electrical contacts.
The excellent elastic rigidity of beryllium has led to its extensive use in precision instrumentation, e.g. in gyroscope inertial guidance systems and in support structures for optical systems.[3]
Beryllium was also used in Jason pistols which were used to strip paint from the hulls of ships. In this case, beryllium was alloyed to copper and used as a hardening agent.[35]
[edit]Mirrors
Beryllium mirrors are of particular interest. Large-area mirrors, frequently with a honeycomb support structure, are used, for example, in meteorological satellites where low weight and long-term dimensional stability are critical. Smaller beryllium mirrors are used in optical guidance systems and in fire-control systems, e.g. in the German-made Leopard 1 and Leopard 2 main battle tanks. In these systems, very rapid movement of the mirror is required which again dictates low mass and high rigidity. Usually the beryllium mirror is coated with hard electroless nickel plating which can be more easily polished to a finer optical finish than beryllium. In some applications, though, the beryllium blank is polished without any coating. This is particularly applicable to cryogenic operation where thermal expansion mismatch can cause the coating to buckle.[3]
The James Webb Space Telescope[36] will have 18 hexagonal beryllium sections for its mirrors. Because JWST will face a temperature of 33 K, the mirror is made of beryllium, capable of handling extreme cold better than glass. Beryllium contracts and deforms less than glass—and remains more uniform—in such temperatures.[37] For the same reason, the optics of the Spitzer Space Telescope are entirely built of beryllium metal.[38]
An earlier major application of beryllium was in brakes for military aircraft because of its hardness, high melting point and exceptional heat dissipation. Environmental considerations have led to substitution by other materials.[3]
[edit]Magnetic applications
Beryllium is non-magnetic. Therefore, tools fabricated out of beryllium are used by naval or military explosive ordnance disposal-teams for work on or near naval mines, since these mines commonly have magnetic fuzes.[39] They are also found in maintenance and construction materials near magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machines. In addition to their being very difficult to remove once magnetic tools have become misplaced inside of the MRI machine, the expulsion of any magnetic items as missiles during ordinary operation of the MRI machine is extremely dangerous.[40]
In the fields of radio communications and powerful (usually military) radars, hand tools made of beryllium are also used to tune the highly magnetic klystrons, magnetrons, traveling wave tubes, etc., that are used for generating high levels of microwave power in the transmitters .
[edit]Nuclear applications
Thin plates or foils of beryllium are sometimes used in nuclear weapon designs as the very outer layer of the plutonium pits in the primary stages of thermonuclear bombs, placed to surround the fissile material. These layers of beryllium are good "pushers" for the implosion of the plutonium-239, and they are also good neutron reflectors, just as they are in beryllium-moderated nuclear reactors.[41]
Beryllium is also commonly used as a neutron source in laboratory experiments in which relatively-few neutrons are needed (rather than having to use an entire nuclear reactor). In this, a target of beryllium-9 is bombarded with energetic alpha particles from a radio-isotope. In the nuclear reaction that occurs, beryllium nuclei are transmuted into carbon-12, and one free neutron is emitted, traveling in about the same direction than the alpha particle was heading.

KurtCobain 04-22-2011 01:09 AM

hmmm... nacho's with Beryllium cheese....mmmmmmm

spida_man23 05-09-2011 01:53 AM

beryllium is whack

spida_man23 05-09-2011 01:55 AM

Table: basic information about and classifications of beryllium.

spida_man23 05-09-2011 01:56 AM

Name: Beryllium
Symbol: Be
Atomic number: 4

spida_man23 05-09-2011 01:56 AM

Name: Beryllium
Symbol: Be
Atomic number: 4

spida_man23 05-09-2011 01:58 AM

Atomic weight: 9.012182 (3)
Standard state: solid at 298 K

spida_man23 05-09-2011 01:58 AM

Atomic weight: 9.012182 (3)
Standard state: solid at 298 K

spida_man23 05-09-2011 01:59 AM

CAS Registry ID: 7440-41-7
Group in periodic table: 2
Group name: Alkaline earth metal
Period in periodic table: 2
Block in periodic table: s-block
Colour: lead grey
Classification: Metallic

spida_man23 05-09-2011 02:00 AM

This sample is from The Elements Collection, an attractive and safely packaged collection of the 92 naturally occurring elements that is available for sale.

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:51 PM

Also many high-energy particle physics collision experiments such as the Large Hadron Collider, the Tevatron, the SLAC and others contain beam pipes made of beryllium.

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:52 PM

Beryllium's low density allows collision products to reach the surrounding detectors without significant interaction, its stiffness allows a powerful vacuum to be produced within the pipe to minimize interaction with gases, its thermal stability allows it to function correctly at temperatures of only a few degrees above absolute zero, and its diamagnetic nature keeps it from interfering with the complex multipole magnet systems used to steer and focus the particle beams.[32]

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:53 PM

beryllium is a Group 2 (IIA) element.

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:53 PM

It is a metal and has a high melting point. At ordinary temperatures, beryllium resists oxidation in air.

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:55 PM

Beryllium compounds are very toxic. Its ability to scratch glass is probably due to the formation of a thin layer of the oxide.

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:56 PM

Aquamarine and emerald are precious forms of the mineral beryl, [Be3Al2(SiO3)6].

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:56 PM

Its chemistry is dominated by its tendency to lose an electron to form Be2+. As this ion is so small it is highly polarising, to the extent that its compounds are rather covalent.

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:57 PM

Its small size means that its complexes tend to be tetrahedral rahter than octahedral.

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:57 PM

Table: basic information about and classifications of beryllium.

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:59 PM

Name: Beryllium

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 08:59 PM

Symbol: Be

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:00 PM

Atomic number: 4

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:01 PM

Atomic weight: 9.012182 (3)

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:04 PM

Standard state: solid at 298 K

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:09 PM

CAS Registry ID: 7440-41-7

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:11 PM

Group in periodic table: 2

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:17 PM

Group name: Alkaline earth metal

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:22 PM

Period in periodic table: 2

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:30 PM

Block in periodic table: s-block

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:31 PM

Colour: lead grey

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:49 PM

Classification: Metallic

KurtCobain 05-16-2011 09:50 PM

This sample is from The Elements Collection, an attractive and safely packaged collection of the 92 naturally occurring elements that is available for sale.

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:07 AM

beryllium is a Group 2 (IIA) element.

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:07 AM

It is a metal and has a high melting point.

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:08 AM

At ordinary temperatures, beryllium resists oxidation in air.

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:08 AM

Beryllium compounds are very toxic.

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:09 AM

Its ability to scratch glass is probably due to the formation of a thin layer of the oxide.

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:12 AM

Aquamarine and emerald are precious forms of the mineral beryl, [Be3Al2(SiO3)6].

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:12 AM

Its chemistry is dominated by its tendency to lose an electron to form Be2+. As this ion is so small it is highly polarising, to the extent that its compounds are rather covalent.

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:13 AM

Its small size means that its complexes tend to be tetrahedral rahter than octahedral.

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:13 AM

Table: basic information about and classifications of beryllium.

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:13 AM

Name: Beryllium

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:14 AM

Symbol: Be

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:14 AM

Atomic number: 4

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:14 AM

Atomic weight: 9.012182 (3)

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:15 AM

Standard state: solid at 298 K

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:15 AM

CAS Registry ID: 7440-41-7

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:15 AM

If I ever had a baby with beryllium...

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:16 AM

It would be my beryllium baby

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:16 AM

b
e
r
y
l
l
i
u
m

b
a
b
y

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:16 AM

But it could never be.

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:19 AM

Group in periodic table: 2

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:19 AM

Group name: Alkaline earth metal

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:20 AM

Period in periodic table: 2

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:22 AM

I love beryllium

KurtCobain 05-31-2011 02:25 AM

sometimes beryllium rubs me the right way


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