Base materials with high potential

From apm
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Very good materials

Best of the best

Best diamondoids

Best SiO2 polymorphs

Metastable ultrahard and dense SiO2 polymorphs:

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)

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

Second row elements:

Quite simple rutile structure & Hard

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

Con: Rather soft materials

Others

  • garnets - hard and cubic (but big unit cell)
  • brommelite BeO - very hard but beryllium is scarce and poisonous