An alloy is a mixture of two or more elements, where at least one of the elements is a metal. Alloys are created to improve the properties of the base metal, such as increasing strength, hardness, corrosion resistance, or reducing the cost of the material.
Substitutional Alloys: In these alloys, the atoms of the different elements replace each other in the crystal lattice. An example is stainless steel, which is made of iron and chromium.
Properties of Alloys
Alloys often exhibit properties that are different from the constituent metals. Some common properties of alloys include:
Increased Strength: Alloys are generally stronger than pure metals.
Use mathematics and computational thinking to express the concentrations of solutions quantitatively using molarity.
Use the concept of pH as a model to predict the relative properties of strong, weak, concentrated, and dilute acids and bases (e.g., Arrhenius and Brønsted-Lowry acids and bases).