Difference between revisions of "Base materials with high potential"
From apm
m |
(→Simple titanium gemstones: added lots of details) |
||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
=== Simple titanium gemstones === | === Simple titanium gemstones === | ||
− | * | + | '''First row elements''' |
+ | * TiB<sub>2</sub> [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium_diboride Titanium diboride] - hexagonal 2D layered - 3230°C - 4.52g/ccm - '''optically metallic''' - highly [[refractory]] | ||
+ | * TiC [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium_carbide Titanium carbide] - simple cubic - 3160°C (800°C in air) - 4.93g/ccm '''Mohs 9 to 9.5''' - water insoluble (almost) | ||
+ | * TiN [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium_nitride Titanium nitride] - simple cubic - 2,947°C - 5.21 g/cm3 - '''optically metallic (golden) - "barrier metal"''' - water insoluble (almost) | ||
+ | '''Second row elements:''' | ||
+ | * TiSi<sub>2</sub> [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium_disilicide Titanium disilicide] - orthorhombic (complex unit cell) - 1,470°C - 4.02g/ccm - water insoluble - '''optically metallic and electrically conductive''' - More [[titanium silicides]] ... | ||
+ | * TiP [https://de.zxc.wiki/wiki/Titan(III) - phosphid Titan(III) phosphide *] - hexagonal - 1860°C - 3.94g/ccm - '''optically metallic''' | ||
+ | '''Titanium oxides:''' | ||
+ | * TiO [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium(II)_oxide] - simple cubic - 1,750C° - 4.95g/ccm - '''optically metallic (golden)''' | ||
+ | * Ti<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub> [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium(III)_oxide] - [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tistarite tristarite] - hexagonal corundum structure (like [[sapphire]]) - 2,130°C (decomposes) - 4.49g/ccm - '''semiconducting to metallic at 200°C''' | ||
+ | * TiO<sub>2</sub> [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium_dioxide] - rutile, anatase, brookite, and more | ||
== Quite simple [[rutile structure]] & Hard == | == Quite simple [[rutile structure]] & Hard == |
Revision as of 10:34, 14 April 2021
Very good materials
Best of the best
Best diamondoids
- diamond and its polymorphs including hexagonal diamond aka lonsdaleite
- moissanite - SiC - high heat resistance
- pure silicon (eventually)
Best SiO2 polymorphs
Metastable ultrahard and dense SiO2 polymorphs:
- stishovite (tetragonal rutile structure)
- seifertite (orthorhombic scrutinyite structure)
Simple titanium gemstones
First row elements
- TiB2 Titanium diboride - hexagonal 2D layered - 3230°C - 4.52g/ccm - optically metallic - highly refractory
- TiC Titanium carbide - simple cubic - 3160°C (800°C in air) - 4.93g/ccm Mohs 9 to 9.5 - water insoluble (almost)
- TiN Titanium nitride - simple cubic - 2,947°C - 5.21 g/cm3 - optically metallic (golden) - "barrier metal" - water insoluble (almost)
Second row elements:
- TiSi2 Titanium disilicide - orthorhombic (complex unit cell) - 1,470°C - 4.02g/ccm - water insoluble - optically metallic and electrically conductive - More titanium silicides ...
- TiP - phosphid Titan(III) phosphide * - hexagonal - 1860°C - 3.94g/ccm - optically metallic
Titanium oxides:
- TiO [1] - simple cubic - 1,750C° - 4.95g/ccm - optically metallic (golden)
- Ti2O3 [2] - tristarite - hexagonal corundum structure (like sapphire) - 2,130°C (decomposes) - 4.49g/ccm - semiconducting to metallic at 200°C
- TiO2 [3] - rutile, anatase, brookite, and more
Quite simple rutile structure & Hard
- rutile TiO2
- stishovite - metastable SiO2 polymorph - rutile structure & very hard and dense
Neo-polymorphs with rutile structure
See: the stishovite continuum currently on the page about silicon
Silicon group: GeO2, SnO2, β-PbO2
Other: MnO2, FeSbO4
Mono metal monoxides (simple cublic NaCl salt structure)
Earth alkali based
- MgO periclase
- CaO - questionable - highly reactive with water
Transition metal based
Some transition metal monoxides (Typical: Max 1300-1900°C - Mohs 5-6)
- TiO hongquiite
- MnO manganosite - (Mn is less abundant)
- FeO wüstite
- NiO brommelite - (Ni is not too abundant on earth but very abundant on metallic asteroids)
V vanadium, Cr chromium, Co cobalt do that too but
these elements are more scarce thus
not included as pure high volume base materials here
Other
- spinell MgAl2O4 - very hard and cubic
Quite good materials with some hampering weakness(es)
Con: low crystal structure symmetry
- leukosapphire - very hard
- quartz - and other low density polymorphs of SiO2
Con: Rather soft materials
- calcite and aragonite
Others
- garnets - hard and cubic (but big unit cell)
- brommelite BeO - very hard but beryllium is scarce and poisonous