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n2ize
09-24-2015, 06:06 PM
I just ordered 40 grams of Gallium metal. Should get here in about a week or so. One of Gallium's more interesting properties is it's very low melting point. At normal room temperature it is a solid but if the temperature rises to around 85 deg on a hot day the Gallium will melt and become liquid and resembles mercury. Likewise when the temperature drops back below 85 deg F the Gallium will again solidify. Similarly it will also melt in your hand due to body temp so it's not a good idea to carry a chunk of it in your pocket. Why did I order it ? No particular reason. It's cool stuff and I just gotta have it... LOL. :)

P.S. As hams most of you are probably well aware that gallium compounds are commonly used in semiconductors.

KK4AMI
09-25-2015, 06:39 AM
I just ordered 40 grams of Gallium metal. Should get here in about a week or so. One of Gallium's more interesting properties is it's very low melting point. At normal room temperature it is a solid but kif the temperature rises to around 85 deg on a hot day the Gallium will melt and become liquid and resembles mercury. Likewise when the temperature drops back below 85 deg F the Gallium will again solidify. Similarly it will also melt in your hand due to body temp so it's not a good idea to carry a chunk of it in your pocket. Why did I order it ? No particular reason. It's cool stuff and I just gotta have it... LOL. :)

P.S. As hams most of you are probably well aware that gallium compounds are commonly used in semiconductors.

You are one of those kids that played with mercury all the time aren't you? Stay out of airports with that stuff, it's considered a terrorist weapon since it reacts and practically eats aluminum.

NQ6U
09-25-2015, 08:40 AM
Stay out of airports with that stuff, it's considered a terrorist weapon since it reacts and practically eats aluminum.

MSDS (https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CB4QFjAAahUKEwjm25SwppLIAhWGk4AKHewiBi4&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.rotometals.com%2Fv%2Fvspfile s%2Fdownloadables%2FMSDS_GALLIUM.pdf&usg=AFQjCNGwpFRzzkruymZVjk5xgmCN_2YJ3A&cad=rja) confirms that gallium is highly corrosive to aluminum and aluminum alloys. Other than that, though, it seems to be pretty safe.

n2ize
09-25-2015, 10:47 AM
MSDS (https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CB4QFjAAahUKEwjm25SwppLIAhWGk4AKHewiBi4&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.rotometals.com%2Fv%2Fvspfile s%2Fdownloadables%2FMSDS_GALLIUM.pdf&usg=AFQjCNGwpFRzzkruymZVjk5xgmCN_2YJ3A&cad=rja) confirms that gallium is highly corrosive to aluminum and aluminum alloys. Other than that, though, it's seems to be pretty safe.

Mercury will have a similar effect on aluminum. However, most aluminum surfaces have a coating of aluminum oxide on them which forms simply from it's exposure to air. This oxide coating acts as a barrier preventing mercury or gallium from attacking the metal. However, if the oxide coating were removed then it would readily react forming an amalgam which would further prevent a protective oxide coating from forming allowing exposure to mercury or gallium to continue reacting with the aluminum.

n2ize
09-25-2015, 11:03 AM
You are one of those kids that played with mercury all the time aren't you?

Yes, although not all the time. As a child I sometimes played with the stuff as did most kids my age. Many moons ago when I worked as an Engineering technician for Duracell I handled quite a bit of mercury (many many pounds of it) as it was used to form the mercury/zinc amalgam that was used for the anodes back in those days. We had to wear protective masks when handling it so as not to inhale the dust or vapors. Our project back then was to try and eliminate the need for mercury in the anode mix. Eventually, years after I left they succeeded. Today alkaline batts are mercury free. I have a small bottle of mercury sitting around here. About 300 or 400 grams worth. I keep it sealed.



Stay out of airports with that stuff, it's considered a terrorist weapon since it reacts and practically eats aluminum.

40 grams is too small an amount to cause any problems. However I would never bring it or any chemical to an airport.

N8XE
09-25-2015, 11:08 AM
On telescope mirrors, they deposit a coating of aluminum and the aluminum oxide acts like a protective coating to the aluminum.

You know, it is funny to think, but we still use metal for telescope mirrors. The glass is simply the supporting structure to that very thin layer of metal.

Have fun with your Gallium.

Jason N8XE

K7SGJ
09-25-2015, 11:34 AM
Just don't try to swallow it all at once.

n2ize
09-25-2015, 12:43 PM
On telescope mirrors, they deposit a coating of aluminum and the aluminum oxide acts like a protective coating to the aluminum.

You know, it is funny to think, but we still use metal for telescope mirrors. The glass is simply the supporting structure to that very thin layer of metal.

Yes. I also recall reading that some early telescopes actually used shiny pools of mercury as reflecting mirrors.



Have fun with your Gallium.
Jason N8XE

I guess I will. I bought it strictly as a novelty. You know, one of those items I have absolutely no practical use for but I still have gotta have it.

n2ize
09-25-2015, 12:44 PM
Just don't try to swallow it all at once.


Nah, don't worry I won't. The stuff won't even get me high. :lol:

K0RGR
09-25-2015, 01:23 PM
My father had a pretty large amount of mercury that he had collected over time. He kept it in a very strong glass container - a normal bottle wouldn't work because the weight of the falling mercury when you tipped the container would break a regular jar. In fact, that's how we collected the mercury. Dad had a whole bunch of old mercury vapor rectifier tubes, and if you turned one of them over a bit too quickly, the mercury would break the tube, and scatter all over the floor. I don't know how much he had, all I remember was that it was heavy enough to require two hands to lift it. He used it to clean relay contacts, among other things.

Mercury is weird stuff to play with. When it hits the floor, it breaks up into countless little balls of liquid metal. Cleaning it up is fairly easy, though. You just get a big ball going, and it will all come back together when you move the ball around.

It's surprising I'm not mad as a hatter after that toy. But we chewed lead solder like chewing gum, too, and used every kind of carcinogenic chemical that has ever been popular in the electronics industry.

N8XE
09-25-2015, 01:48 PM
Yes. I also recall reading that some early telescopes actually used shiny pools of mercury as reflecting mirrors.[quote]

Yup, they still do (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_mirror_telescope). The obvious disadvantage is they can only be pointed straight up which is fine for some applications.

[quote]I guess I will. I bought it strictly as a novelty. You know, one of those items I have absolutely no practical use for but I still have gotta have it.

Sometimes having fun has no practical value or use. Some consider that the most valuable of all. Just don't make a spoon out of it (http://www.amazon.com/The-Disappearing-Spoon-Periodic-Elements/dp/0316051632) :)

Jason N8XE

n2ize
09-25-2015, 03:18 PM
My father had a pretty large amount of mercury that he had collected over time. He kept it in a very strong glass container - a normal bottle wouldn't work because the weight of the falling mercury when you tipped the container would break a regular jar. In fact, that's how we collected the mercury. Dad had a whole bunch of old mercury vapor rectifier tubes, and if you turned one of them over a bit too quickly, the mercury would break the tube, and scatter all over the floor. I don't know how much he had, all I remember was that it was heavy enough to require two hands to lift it. He used it to clean relay contacts, among other things.

When I was a Duracell most of the mercury I used came in cases, each case containing a dozen 5 lb plastic bottles. That was really a small amount compared to the amounts they used at their main production plants down south. But I was in a R&D facility so we were making much smaller batches of anode mixes for test cells. In those days the anode mixes contained 7% mercury by weight, the rest was powdered zinc, water and a gelling agent. The mercury would be blended with the zinc to form an amalgam. Why did they use mercury at all ? Well, for one it enhanced cell performance and second it inhibited out-gassing making it much less likely that a cell would vent and leak. These days they are all mercury free. Don't know what they replaced it with. I wonder if any of the work I did way back in the early 1980's had any impact on the mercury free alkaline cells of today. Good chance they still have copies of my notebooks stored somewhere in their records.



Mercury is weird stuff to play with. When it hits the floor, it breaks up into countless little balls of liquid metal. Cleaning it up is fairly easy, though. You just get a big ball going, and it will all come back together when you move the ball around.


Yeah I used to do that all the time when i was a kid. My Dad brought home a small vial of mercury from the place he worked in and I used to pour some into a dish and break it up into tiny balls and then try and use one ball to collect up all the others without any of the other balls colliding. The stuff was just too cool to not enjoy, especially as a youngster. It was hard to envision that this was actually a liquid metal and its properties were very intriguing.



It's surprising I'm not mad as a hatter after that toy. But we chewed lead solder like chewing gum, too, and used every kind of carcinogenic chemical that has ever been popular in the electronics industry.

From what I read elemental mercury is not that problematic unless you swallow it, adsorb it through a cut in the skin, or breath in its vapours, particularly if the mercury is heated in an enclosed space. What is far more dangerous than elemental mercury are mercury compounds which are soluble, easily adsorbed into the body, and can be in solid powder form that can become airborne and accidentally inhaled or ingested. As kids occaisionaly playing with mercury in its elemental form is not that dangerous and probably why we are not mad hatters today... or are we ??? :)

As a kid I played around with plenty of dangerous stuff. I remember my dad gave me his old lead casting (Kast-A-Toy it was called) set for making toy soldiers. he got it when he was a kid back in the 1930's My dad brought me so lead ingots and I spent many hours melting lead in the electric pot provided with the kit and then pouring the lead into the molds to cast the toy lead soldiers. To this date I still have the kit and probably still have a few of the soldiers laying around somewhere. Could you imagine such a toy being sold today ?? As an adult I also had my share of handling dangerous stuff when i was working in industry, i.e mercury, cadmium, lead, concentrated acids, cyanide solutions and even some low- moderate level radioactive materials used in measuring devices and test equipment.

Perhaps it was a good idea that I eventually settled on a degree and a career in math / computer sciences. Probably a bit safer in the long term...LOL.

n2ize
10-01-2015, 05:45 PM
Got my Gallium today. A 40 g sample. It came packed in a plastic vial and was shipped from China. So far I've run it through some tests. A small piece in mmy hand melted within a few seconds. Since the ambient temperature is too cold I immersed the vial in some warm water and so far it is melting as expected. It is a very fascinating element. Much like mercury when in it's liquid state (although less toxic). When solid it is a soft metal with a beautiful silvery sheen. Definitely a fascinating and very beautiful element. A nice addition to my mineral and element collection.

KG4CGC
10-04-2015, 07:58 PM
Build a crystal radio using it as a rectifier.

n2ize
10-09-2015, 06:34 PM
Build a crystal radio using it as a rectifier.

Well, once Gallium is converted into the compound gallium arsenide it can be used to create all sorts of semiconductor devices/.

KG4NEL
10-16-2015, 08:25 AM
Well, once Gallium is converted into the compound gallium arsenide it can be used to create all sorts of semiconductor devices/.

Keeping arsenic in your hand might not be as harmless.

I know, I know, uphill to school both ways, mercury and uranium on cereal and waffles in the old days... :mrgreen:

K2GSP
10-17-2015, 11:21 PM
We don't use radioactive Gallium much anymore. Years back it was a pretty regular study, but now there are several other tests using Indium or technetium that have taken it's place.

n2ize
10-21-2015, 01:03 PM
We don't use radioactive Gallium much anymore. Years back it was a pretty regular study, but now there are several other tests using Indium or technetium that have taken it's place.

Gallium has about 4 natural isotopes, most of which are stable & nonradioactive. 1 of the 4 is very slightly radioactive with an extremely long half life. You might be thinking of the Ga-67 isotope (gamma emitter) which I believe is a man made isotope. I believe it is produced by beta bombardment in a cyclotron. The reason Ga-67 was desirable in medicine was due to its very short half life, approx 3 days. This way a patient doesn't stay radioactive for too long. There is also another isotope produced that has an even shorter half life (measured in minutes).

What kind of tests were you using it for ? From what I remember reading it was primarily used for cancer screening.