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Indium

Source of the photo
http://periodictable.com/Elements/049/index.html
Author of the description
Gruiz Katalin

Atomic number

49

Atomic mass

114.82 g.mol -1

Electronegativity

2

Density

7.31 g.cm-3 at 20°C

Melting point

156 °C

Boiling point

2000 °C

Vanderwaals radius

0.162 nm

Ionic radius

0.092 nm (+2)

Isotopes

11

Electronic shell

[ Kr ] 4d10 5s25p1

Energy of first ionisation

558.2 kJ.mol -1

Energy of second ionisation

1820.2 kJ.mol -1

Energy of third ionisation

2704 kJ.mol -1

Standard potential

- 0.34 V ( In3+/ In )

Discovered by

Ferdinand Reich 1863

 

Indium is a soft, ductile, manleable, lustrous metallic metal. Its colour is silvery white and it has a face-centered tetragonal structure. It is liquid over a wide range of temperatures, like gallium that belongs to its same group. Both indium and gallium are able to wet glass. Indium is stable in air and in water but dissolves in acids. When heated above its melting point it ignites burning with a violet flame.

Applications

Indium is used in low-melting fusible alloys and as a protective plate for bearings and other metal surfaces. It can be used to form corrosion-resistant mirror surface: when evaporated and allowed to deposit on glass it produces a mirror as good a quality as that of silver. Indium foils are used to assess what is going on inside nuclear reactors. Finally, it is used as light filter in low pressure sodium vapor lamps.