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{{Short description|Легура живе са другим металом}}
{{друго значење2|Амалгам}}
{{друго значење2|Амалгам}}
[[Датотека:Amalgam-200675.jpg|мини|Веома ретка сорта амалгама сребра која садржи 13% живе. Пронађен у само 4 локалитета широм света, 2 у Чилеу и 2 у Британској Колумбији, Канада]]
[[Датотека:Amalgam-200675.jpg|мини|Веома ретка сорта амалгама сребра која садржи 13% живе. Пронађен у само 4 локалитета широм света, 2 у Чилеу и 2 у Британској Колумбији, Канада]]

'''Амалгам''' представља раствор [[метал]]а у [[жива|живи]], која и сама припада металима, као једини течни представник. Амалгам је [[легура]] живе неког другог [[метал]]а, која може бити течна, мека паста или чврста, у зависности од пропорције живе. Ове легуре се формирају путем [[Метална веза|металног везивања]],<ref>Callister, W. D. "Materials Science and Engineering: An Introduction" 2007, 7th edition, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. New York, Section 4.3 and Chapter 9.</ref> при чему се електростатичком привлачном силом [[Valence and conduction bands|проводних електрона]] везују позитивно наелектрисани метални јони у [[кристална структура|структуру кристалне решетке]].<ref>[http://mine-engineer.com/mining/minproc/MercAmal.htm Mercury Amalgamation ]</ref>
'''Амалгам''' представља раствор [[метал]]а у [[жива|живи]], која и сама припада металима, као једини течни представник. Амалгам је [[легура]] живе неког другог [[метал]]а, која може бити течна, мека паста или чврста, у зависности од пропорције живе. Ове легуре се формирају путем [[Метална веза|металног везивања]],<ref>Callister, W. D. "Materials Science and Engineering: An Introduction" 2007, 7th edition, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. New York, Section 4.3 and Chapter 9.</ref> при чему се електростатичком привлачном силом [[Valence and conduction bands|проводних електрона]] везују позитивно наелектрисани метални јони у [[кристална структура|структуру кристалне решетке]].<ref>[http://mine-engineer.com/mining/minproc/MercAmal.htm Mercury Amalgamation ]</ref>


У свакодневном говору појам амалгама се изједначава са појмом [[амалгамска пломба|амалгамске пломбе]].
У свакодневном говору појам амалгама се изједначава са појмом [[амалгамска пломба|амалгамске пломбе]].

== Важни амалгами ==
{{рут}}
=== Zinc amalgam ===
Zinc amalgam finds use in organic synthesis (e.g., for the [[Clemmensen reduction]]).<ref>Ham, Peter "Zinc amalgam" in e-EROS Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis (2001). {{DOI|10.1002/047084289X.rz003}}</ref>
It is the reducing agent in the [[Jones reductor]], used in analytical chemistry. Formerly the zinc plates of dry [[battery (electric)|batteries]] were amalgamated with a small amount of mercury to prevent deterioration in storage. It is a binary solution (liquid-solid) of mercury and zinc.

=== Potassium amalgam ===
For the [[alkali metals]], amalgamation is exothermic, and distinct chemical forms can be identified, such as KHg and KHg<sub>2</sub>.<ref name="duwell">{{cite journal | title=The Crystal Structures of KHg and KHg2 |author=E J Duwell |author2=N C Baenziger |journal=Acta Crystallogr. | volume=8 |year=1955 |pages=705–710 | doi=10.1107/S0365110X55002168 | issue=11|doi-access=free }}</ref> KHg is a gold-coloured compound with a melting point of 178&nbsp;°C, and KHg<sub>2</sub> a silver-coloured compound with a melting point of 278&nbsp;°C. These amalgams are very sensitive to air and water, but can be worked with under dry nitrogen. The Hg-Hg distance is around 300&nbsp;[[picometre]]s, Hg-K around 358&nbsp;pm.<ref name="duwell" />

Phases K<sub>5</sub>Hg<sub>7</sub> and KHg<sub>11</sub> are also known; [[rubidium]], [[strontium]] and [[barium]] undecamercurides are known and isostructural. [[Sodium amalgam|Sodium amalgam (NaHg<sub>2</sub>)]] has a different structure, with the mercury atoms forming hexagonal layers, and the sodium atoms a linear chain which fits into the holes in the hexagonal layers, but the potassium atom is too large for this structure to work in KHg<sub>2</sub>.

=== Sodium amalgam ===
{{Main|Sodium amalgam}}
[[Sodium]] amalgam is produced as a byproduct of the [[chloralkali process]] and used as an important reducing agent in organic and inorganic chemistry. With water, it decomposes into concentrated [[sodium hydroxide]] solution, hydrogen and mercury, which can then return to the chloralkali process anew. If absolutely water-free alcohol is used instead of water, an [[alkoxide]] of sodium is produced instead of the alkali solution.

=== Aluminium amalgam ===
{{Main|Aluminium amalgam}}
[[Aluminium]] can form an amalgam through a reaction with mercury. Aluminium amalgam may be prepared by either grinding aluminium pellets or wire in mercury, or by allowing aluminium wire or foil to react with a solution of [[mercuric chloride]]. This amalgam is used as a reagent to reduce compounds, such as the reduction of [[imine]]s to [[amine]]s. The aluminium is the ultimate electron donor, and the mercury serves to mediate the electron transfer.<ref>Emmanuil I. Troyansky and Meghan Baker "Aluminum Amalgam" in e-EROS Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis 2016, {{DOI|10.1002/047084289X.ra076.pub2}}</ref>
The reaction itself and the waste from it contain mercury, so special safety precautions and disposal methods are needed. As an environmentally friendlier alternative, hydrides or other reducing agents can often be used to accomplish the same synthetic result. Another environmentally friendly alternative is an alloy of aluminium and gallium which similarly renders the aluminium more reactive by preventing it from forming an oxide layer.

=== Tin amalgam ===
[[Tin]] amalgam was used in the middle of the 19th century as a reflective [[silvering|mirror coating]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Die Sendung mit der Maus, Sachgeschichte vom Spiegel |url=http://leifi.physik.uni-muenchen.de/web_ph09/umwelt_technik/10spiegelbau_maus/spegelbau.htm |language=de |access-date=2009-04-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090417222633/http://leifi.physik.uni-muenchen.de/web_ph09/umwelt_technik/10spiegelbau_maus/spegelbau.htm |archive-date=17 April 2009 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

=== Other amalgams ===
A variety of amalgams are known that are of interest mainly in the research context.
* [[Ammonium]] amalgam is a grey, soft, spongy mass discovered in 1808 by [[Humphry Davy]] and [[Jöns Jakob Berzelius]]. It decomposes readily at room temperature or in contact with water or alcohol:
*: <math>\mathrm{2 \ H_3N{-}Hg{-}H \ \xrightarrow{\Delta T} \ 2 \ NH_3 + H_2 + 2 \ Hg}</math>
* [[Thallium]] amalgam has a freezing point of −58&nbsp;°C, which is lower than that of pure mercury (−38.8&nbsp;°C) so it has found a use in low temperature thermometers.
* [[Gold]] amalgam: Refined gold, when finely ground and brought into contact with mercury where the surfaces of both metals are clean, amalgamates readily and quickly to form alloys ranging from AuHg<sub>2</sub> to Au<sub>8</sub>Hg.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://mine-engineer.com/mining/minproc/MercAmal.htm|title=Mercury Amalgamation|website=mine-engineer.com|access-date=8 April 2018}}</ref>
* [[Lead]] forms an amalgam when filings are mixed with mercury and is also listed as a naturally occurring alloy called leadamalgam in the [[Nickel–Strunz classification]].<ref>webmineral.com/data/Leadamalgam.shtml</ref>

=== Dental amalgam ===
{{Main|Amalgam (dentistry)}}
[[File:Filling.jpg|thumb|An amalgam dental filling]]
Dentistry has used alloys of mercury with metals such as silver, [[copper]], [[indium]], [[tin]] and [[zinc]]. Amalgam is an "excellent and versatile restorative material"<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Bharti|first1=Ramesh|last2=Wadhwani|first2=Kulvinder Kaur|last3=Tikku|first3=Aseem Prakash|last4=Chandra|first4=Anil|date=2010|title=Dental amalgam: An update|journal=Journal of Conservative Dentistry |volume=13|issue=4|pages=204–208|doi=10.4103/0972-0707.73380|issn=0972-0707|pmc=3010024|pmid=21217947}}</ref> and is used in dentistry for a number of reasons. It is inexpensive and relatively easy to use and manipulate during placement; it remains soft for a short time so it can be packed to fill any irregular volume, and then forms a hard compound. Amalgam possesses greater [[longevity]] when compared to other direct restorative materials, such as composite. However, this difference has decreased with continual development of composite resins.

Amalgam is typically compared to resin-based composites because many applications are similar and many physical properties and costs are comparable.

In July 2018 the EU prohibited amalgam for dental treatment of children under 15 years and of pregnant or breastfeeding women.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ec.europa.eu/environment/chemicals/mercury/regulation_en.htm|title=Mercury Regulation EU|website=www.europa.eu}}</ref>

== Употреба у рударству ==
Mercury has been used in gold and silver mining because of the convenience and the ease with which mercury and the precious metals will amalgamate. In gold placer mining, in which minute specks of gold are washed from sand or gravel deposits, mercury was often used to separate the gold from other heavy minerals.

After all of the practical metal had been taken out from the ore, the mercury was dispensed down a long copper trough, which formed a thin coating of mercury on the exterior. The waste ore was then transferred down the trough, and gold in the waste amalgamated with the mercury. This coating would then be scraped off and refined by evaporation to get rid of the mercury, leaving behind somewhat high-purity gold.

Mercury amalgamation was first used on silver ores with the development of the [[patio process]] in Mexico in 1557. There were also additional amalgamation processes that were created for processing silver ores, including [[pan amalgamation]] and the [[Washoe process]].

=== Gold amalgam ===

==== Gold extraction (mining) ====
Gold amalgam has proved effective where gold fines ("flour gold") would not be extractable from ore using hydro-mechanical methods. Large amounts of mercury were used in ''[[placer mining]]'', where deposits composed largely of decomposed granite slurry were separated in long runs of "riffle boxes", with mercury dumped in at the head of the run. The amalgam formed is a heavy solid mass of dull gray color. (The use of mercury in 19th century placer mining in California, now prohibited, has caused extensive pollution problems in riverine and estuarine environments, ongoing to this day.) Sometimes substantial slugs of amalgam are found in downstream river and creek bottoms by amateur [[wet suit|wet-suited]] miners seeking gold nuggets with the aid of an engine-powered water vacuum/dredge mounted on a float.

==== Gold extraction (ore processing) ====
[[File:Grabill - Clean Up day at the Deadwood Terra Gold Stamp Mill.jpg|thumb|Interior of the Deadwood Terra Gold [[Stamp mill|Stamp Mill]]. Crushed ore is washed over mercury-coated copper sheets, and fine gold particles form an amalgam with the mercury. The amalgam was scraped off and the gold then separated from the amalgam by heating and evaporating the mercury, which was then recovered by a [[condensation|condenser]] for reapplication to the plates.]]

Where [[stamp mill]]s were used to crush gold-bearing ore to fines, a part of the extraction process involved the use of mercury-wetted copper plates, over which the crushed fines were washed. A periodic scraping and re-mercurizing of the plate resulted in amalgam for further processing.

==== Gold extraction (retorting) ====
Amalgam obtained by either process was then heated in a distillation retort, recovering the mercury for reuse and leaving behind the gold. As this released mercury vapors to the atmosphere, the process could induce adverse health effects and long term pollution.

Today, mercury amalgamation has been replaced by other methods to recuperate gold and silver from ore in developed nations. Hazards of mercurial toxic waste have played a major role in the phasing out of the mercury amalgamation processes. However, mercury amalgamation is still regularly used by small-scale gold placer miners (often illegally), particularly in developing countries.

== Амалгамска сонда ==
[[File:Amalgamprobe.jpg|thumb|250п|The amalgam probe]]
Mercury salts are, compared to mercury metal and amalgams, highly toxic due to their solubility in water. The presence of these salts in water can be detected with a probe that uses the readiness of mercury ions to form an amalgam with copper. A [[nitric acid]] solution of salts under investigation is applied to a piece of copper foil, and any mercury ions present will leave spots of silvery-coloured amalgam. Silver ions leave similar spots but are easily washed away, making this a means of distinguishing silver from mercury.

The [[redox reaction]] involved where mercury oxidizes the copper is:

:Hg<sup>2+</sup> + Cu → Hg + Cu<sup>2+</sup>.

== Токсичност ==

Dental amalgam has been studied and is generally considered to be safe for humans,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.quackwatch.com/01QuackeryRelatedTopics/mercury.html|title=The "Mercury Toxicity" Scam:: How Anti-Amalgamists Swindle People|website=www.quackwatch.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ada.org/en/about-the-ada/ada-positions-policies-and-statements/statement-on-dental-amalgam|title=Statement on Dental Amalgam|website=www.ada.org}}</ref> though the validity of some studies and their conclusions have been questioned.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Is dental amalgam safe for humans? The opinion of the scientific committee of the European Commission|first=Joachim|last=Mutter|date=13 January 2011|journal=Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology|volume=6|issue=1|pages=2|doi=10.1186/1745-6673-6-2|pmid=21232090|pmc=3025977}}</ref>
In July 2018 the EU prohibited amalgam for dental treatment of children under 15 years and of pregnant or breastfeeding women. <ref>{{cite web|url=http://ec.europa.eu/environment/chemicals/mercury/regulation_en.htm|title=Mercury Regulation EU|website=www.europa.eu}}</ref>


== Референце ==
== Референце ==
Ред 12: Ред 89:
* Prandtl, W.: ''Humphry Davy, Jöns Jacob Berzelius, zwei führende Chemiker aus der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts''. Wissenschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft, Stuttgart, 1948
* Prandtl, W.: ''Humphry Davy, Jöns Jacob Berzelius, zwei führende Chemiker aus der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts''. Wissenschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft, Stuttgart, 1948
* Hofmann, H., Jander, G.: ''Qualitative Analyse'', Walter de Gruyter. {{page|year=1972|isbn=978-3-11-003653-4|pages=}}
* Hofmann, H., Jander, G.: ''Qualitative Analyse'', Walter de Gruyter. {{page|year=1972|isbn=978-3-11-003653-4|pages=}}
* {{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=L1Nv_hffJl8C |title=Materials in Dentistry: Principles and Applications - Jack L. Ferracane - Google Boeken |access-date=2012-09-19|isbn=9780781727334 |last1=Ferracane |first1=Jack L. |year=2001 }}
* {{cite book |last=Ferracane |first=Jack L. |title=Materials in Dentistry: Principles and Applications |publisher=Lippincott Williams & Wilkins |year=2001 |page=3 |isbn=978-0-7817-2733-4 }}
* {{cite journal |vauthors=Bharti R, Wadhwani KK, Tikku AP, Chandra A |year=2010 |title=Dental amalgam: An update |journal=Journal of Conservative Dentistry |volume=13 |issue=4 |pages=204–208 |doi=10.4103/0972-0707.73380 |pmc=3010024 |pmid=21217947}}
* {{cite journal |last=Bjørklund |first=G |title=The history of dental amalgam (in Norwegian) |journal=[[Tidsskr Nor Laegeforen]] |volume=109 |issue=34–36 |pages=3582–3585 |year=1989 |pmid=2694433 }}
* {{cite journal|last=Czarnetzki|first=A.|author2=Ehrhardt S.|title=Re-dating the Chinese amalgam-filling of teeth in Europe|journal=International Journal of Anthropology|year=1990|volume=5|issue=4|pages=325–332}}
* {{cite journal |last=Westcott |first=A. |title=Report to the Onondonga Medical Society on metal paste (amalgam) |journal=American Journal of Dental Science IV |series=1st Ser |year=1844 |pages=175–201}}
* {{cite journal |last=Molin |first=C |title=Amalgam—fact and fiction |journal=Scandinavian Journal of Dental Research |volume=100 |issue=1 |pages=66–73 |date=February 1992 |pmid=1557606 |doi= 10.1111/j.1600-0722.1992.tb01811.x}}
* {{Cite book|title=Craig's Restorative Dental Materials |last1=Sakaguchi |first1=R.L. |last2=Powers |first2=J.M. |date=11 April 2018 |publisher=Mosby |isbn=9780323478212}}
* {{Cite journal |last1=Davies |first1=R. Andrew |last2=Ardalan |first2=Shaghayegh |last3=Mu |first3=Wei-Hua |last4=Tian |first4=Kun |last5=Farsaikiya |first5=Fariborz |last6=Darvell |first6=Brian W. |last7=Chass |first7=Gregory A. |date=2010-01-27 |title=Geometric, electronic and elastic properties of dental silver amalgam γ-(Ag3Sn), γ1-(Ag2Hg3), γ2-(Sn8Hg) phases, comparison of experiment and theory |journal=Intermetallics |volume=18 |issue=5 |pages=756–760 |doi=10.1016/j.intermet.2009.12.004 |issn=0966-9795 |url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0966979509003185}}
{{Refend}}
{{Refend}}


Ред 27: Ред 113:
* {{cite web|last=Poliakoff|first=Martyn|title=Amalgams|url=http://www.periodicvideos.com/videos/feature_amalgams.htm|work=[[The Periodic Table of Videos]]|publisher=[[University of Nottingham]]|authorlink=Martyn Poliakoff|year=2009}}
* {{cite web|last=Poliakoff|first=Martyn|title=Amalgams|url=http://www.periodicvideos.com/videos/feature_amalgams.htm|work=[[The Periodic Table of Videos]]|publisher=[[University of Nottingham]]|authorlink=Martyn Poliakoff|year=2009}}
* {{Cite AmCyc|wstitle=Amalgam |short=x}}
* {{Cite AmCyc|wstitle=Amalgam |short=x}}
* {{cite web |url=http://ec.europa.eu/environment/chemicals/mercury/regulation_en.htm |title=Mercury Regulation |date=2020-09-23 |website=Environment |publisher=European Commission |location=Brussels}}
* {{cite web |title=Dental Amalgam Fillings |url=https://www.fda.gov/medical-devices/dental-devices/dental-amalgam-fillings |date=2020-09-29 |publisher=U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) |location=Silver Spring, MD}}


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Верзија на датум 7. новембар 2021. у 23:26

Веома ретка сорта амалгама сребра која садржи 13% живе. Пронађен у само 4 локалитета широм света, 2 у Чилеу и 2 у Британској Колумбији, Канада

Амалгам представља раствор метала у живи, која и сама припада металима, као једини течни представник. Амалгам је легура живе неког другог метала, која може бити течна, мека паста или чврста, у зависности од пропорције живе. Ове легуре се формирају путем металног везивања,[1] при чему се електростатичком привлачном силом проводних електрона везују позитивно наелектрисани метални јони у структуру кристалне решетке.[2]

У свакодневном говору појам амалгама се изједначава са појмом амалгамске пломбе.

Важни амалгами

Zinc amalgam

Zinc amalgam finds use in organic synthesis (e.g., for the Clemmensen reduction).[3] It is the reducing agent in the Jones reductor, used in analytical chemistry. Formerly the zinc plates of dry batteries were amalgamated with a small amount of mercury to prevent deterioration in storage. It is a binary solution (liquid-solid) of mercury and zinc.

Potassium amalgam

For the alkali metals, amalgamation is exothermic, and distinct chemical forms can be identified, such as KHg and KHg2.[4] KHg is a gold-coloured compound with a melting point of 178 °C, and KHg2 a silver-coloured compound with a melting point of 278 °C. These amalgams are very sensitive to air and water, but can be worked with under dry nitrogen. The Hg-Hg distance is around 300 picometres, Hg-K around 358 pm.[4]

Phases K5Hg7 and KHg11 are also known; rubidium, strontium and barium undecamercurides are known and isostructural. Sodium amalgam (NaHg2) has a different structure, with the mercury atoms forming hexagonal layers, and the sodium atoms a linear chain which fits into the holes in the hexagonal layers, but the potassium atom is too large for this structure to work in KHg2.

Sodium amalgam

Sodium amalgam is produced as a byproduct of the chloralkali process and used as an important reducing agent in organic and inorganic chemistry. With water, it decomposes into concentrated sodium hydroxide solution, hydrogen and mercury, which can then return to the chloralkali process anew. If absolutely water-free alcohol is used instead of water, an alkoxide of sodium is produced instead of the alkali solution.

Aluminium amalgam

Aluminium can form an amalgam through a reaction with mercury. Aluminium amalgam may be prepared by either grinding aluminium pellets or wire in mercury, or by allowing aluminium wire or foil to react with a solution of mercuric chloride. This amalgam is used as a reagent to reduce compounds, such as the reduction of imines to amines. The aluminium is the ultimate electron donor, and the mercury serves to mediate the electron transfer.[5] The reaction itself and the waste from it contain mercury, so special safety precautions and disposal methods are needed. As an environmentally friendlier alternative, hydrides or other reducing agents can often be used to accomplish the same synthetic result. Another environmentally friendly alternative is an alloy of aluminium and gallium which similarly renders the aluminium more reactive by preventing it from forming an oxide layer.

Tin amalgam

Tin amalgam was used in the middle of the 19th century as a reflective mirror coating.[6]

Other amalgams

A variety of amalgams are known that are of interest mainly in the research context.

  • Ammonium amalgam is a grey, soft, spongy mass discovered in 1808 by Humphry Davy and Jöns Jakob Berzelius. It decomposes readily at room temperature or in contact with water or alcohol:
  • Thallium amalgam has a freezing point of −58 °C, which is lower than that of pure mercury (−38.8 °C) so it has found a use in low temperature thermometers.
  • Gold amalgam: Refined gold, when finely ground and brought into contact with mercury where the surfaces of both metals are clean, amalgamates readily and quickly to form alloys ranging from AuHg2 to Au8Hg.[7]
  • Lead forms an amalgam when filings are mixed with mercury and is also listed as a naturally occurring alloy called leadamalgam in the Nickel–Strunz classification.[8]

Dental amalgam

An amalgam dental filling

Dentistry has used alloys of mercury with metals such as silver, copper, indium, tin and zinc. Amalgam is an "excellent and versatile restorative material"[9] and is used in dentistry for a number of reasons. It is inexpensive and relatively easy to use and manipulate during placement; it remains soft for a short time so it can be packed to fill any irregular volume, and then forms a hard compound. Amalgam possesses greater longevity when compared to other direct restorative materials, such as composite. However, this difference has decreased with continual development of composite resins.

Amalgam is typically compared to resin-based composites because many applications are similar and many physical properties and costs are comparable.

In July 2018 the EU prohibited amalgam for dental treatment of children under 15 years and of pregnant or breastfeeding women.[10]

Употреба у рударству

Mercury has been used in gold and silver mining because of the convenience and the ease with which mercury and the precious metals will amalgamate. In gold placer mining, in which minute specks of gold are washed from sand or gravel deposits, mercury was often used to separate the gold from other heavy minerals.

After all of the practical metal had been taken out from the ore, the mercury was dispensed down a long copper trough, which formed a thin coating of mercury on the exterior. The waste ore was then transferred down the trough, and gold in the waste amalgamated with the mercury. This coating would then be scraped off and refined by evaporation to get rid of the mercury, leaving behind somewhat high-purity gold.

Mercury amalgamation was first used on silver ores with the development of the patio process in Mexico in 1557. There were also additional amalgamation processes that were created for processing silver ores, including pan amalgamation and the Washoe process.

Gold amalgam

Gold extraction (mining)

Gold amalgam has proved effective where gold fines ("flour gold") would not be extractable from ore using hydro-mechanical methods. Large amounts of mercury were used in placer mining, where deposits composed largely of decomposed granite slurry were separated in long runs of "riffle boxes", with mercury dumped in at the head of the run. The amalgam formed is a heavy solid mass of dull gray color. (The use of mercury in 19th century placer mining in California, now prohibited, has caused extensive pollution problems in riverine and estuarine environments, ongoing to this day.) Sometimes substantial slugs of amalgam are found in downstream river and creek bottoms by amateur wet-suited miners seeking gold nuggets with the aid of an engine-powered water vacuum/dredge mounted on a float.

Gold extraction (ore processing)

Interior of the Deadwood Terra Gold Stamp Mill. Crushed ore is washed over mercury-coated copper sheets, and fine gold particles form an amalgam with the mercury. The amalgam was scraped off and the gold then separated from the amalgam by heating and evaporating the mercury, which was then recovered by a condenser for reapplication to the plates.

Where stamp mills were used to crush gold-bearing ore to fines, a part of the extraction process involved the use of mercury-wetted copper plates, over which the crushed fines were washed. A periodic scraping and re-mercurizing of the plate resulted in amalgam for further processing.

Gold extraction (retorting)

Amalgam obtained by either process was then heated in a distillation retort, recovering the mercury for reuse and leaving behind the gold. As this released mercury vapors to the atmosphere, the process could induce adverse health effects and long term pollution.

Today, mercury amalgamation has been replaced by other methods to recuperate gold and silver from ore in developed nations. Hazards of mercurial toxic waste have played a major role in the phasing out of the mercury amalgamation processes. However, mercury amalgamation is still regularly used by small-scale gold placer miners (often illegally), particularly in developing countries.

Амалгамска сонда

The amalgam probe

Mercury salts are, compared to mercury metal and amalgams, highly toxic due to their solubility in water. The presence of these salts in water can be detected with a probe that uses the readiness of mercury ions to form an amalgam with copper. A nitric acid solution of salts under investigation is applied to a piece of copper foil, and any mercury ions present will leave spots of silvery-coloured amalgam. Silver ions leave similar spots but are easily washed away, making this a means of distinguishing silver from mercury.

The redox reaction involved where mercury oxidizes the copper is:

Hg2+ + Cu → Hg + Cu2+.

Токсичност

Dental amalgam has been studied and is generally considered to be safe for humans,[11][12] though the validity of some studies and their conclusions have been questioned.[13] In July 2018 the EU prohibited amalgam for dental treatment of children under 15 years and of pregnant or breastfeeding women. [14]

Референце

  1. ^ Callister, W. D. "Materials Science and Engineering: An Introduction" 2007, 7th edition, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. New York, Section 4.3 and Chapter 9.
  2. ^ Mercury Amalgamation
  3. ^ Ham, Peter "Zinc amalgam" in e-EROS Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis (2001). doi:10.1002/047084289X.rz003
  4. ^ а б E J Duwell; N C Baenziger (1955). „The Crystal Structures of KHg and KHg2”. Acta Crystallogr. 8 (11): 705—710. doi:10.1107/S0365110X55002168Слободан приступ. 
  5. ^ Emmanuil I. Troyansky and Meghan Baker "Aluminum Amalgam" in e-EROS Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis 2016, doi:10.1002/047084289X.ra076.pub2
  6. ^ „Die Sendung mit der Maus, Sachgeschichte vom Spiegel” (на језику: немачки). Архивирано из оригинала 17. 4. 2009. г. Приступљено 2009-04-24. 
  7. ^ „Mercury Amalgamation”. mine-engineer.com. Приступљено 8. 4. 2018. 
  8. ^ webmineral.com/data/Leadamalgam.shtml
  9. ^ Bharti, Ramesh; Wadhwani, Kulvinder Kaur; Tikku, Aseem Prakash; Chandra, Anil (2010). „Dental amalgam: An update”. Journal of Conservative Dentistry. 13 (4): 204—208. ISSN 0972-0707. PMC 3010024Слободан приступ. PMID 21217947. doi:10.4103/0972-0707.73380. 
  10. ^ „Mercury Regulation EU”. www.europa.eu. 
  11. ^ „The "Mercury Toxicity" Scam:: How Anti-Amalgamists Swindle People”. www.quackwatch.com. 
  12. ^ „Statement on Dental Amalgam”. www.ada.org. 
  13. ^ Mutter, Joachim (13. 1. 2011). „Is dental amalgam safe for humans? The opinion of the scientific committee of the European Commission”. Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology. 6 (1): 2. PMC 3025977Слободан приступ. PMID 21232090. doi:10.1186/1745-6673-6-2. 
  14. ^ „Mercury Regulation EU”. www.europa.eu. 

Литература

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