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Silver

Source of the photo
http://hu.wikipedia.org
Author of the description
Gruiz Katalin

Atomic number

47

Atomic mass

107.87 g.mol -1

Electronegativity

1.9

Density

10.5 g.cm-3 at 20°C

Melting point

962 °C

Boiling point

2212 °C

Vanderwaals radius

0.144 nm

Ionic radius

0.126 nm

Isotopes

11

Electronic shell

[ Kr ] 4d10 5s1

Energy of first ionization

758 kJ.mol -1

Energy of second ionization

2061 kJ.mol -1

Discovered by

The ancients

 

 

Pure silver is nearly white, lustrous, soft, very ductile, malleable, it is an excellent conductor of heat and electricity. It is not a chemically active metal, but it is attacked by nitric acid (forming the nitrate) and by hot concentrated sulfuric acid. It has the highest electrical conductivity of all metals, but its greater cost has prevented it from being widely used for electrical purposes.

Silver is almost always monovalent in its compounds, but an oxide, a fluoride, and a sulfide of divalent silver are known. It does not oxidize in air but reacts with the hydrogen sulfide present in the air, forming silver sulfide (tarnish). This is why silver objects need regular cleaning. Silver is stable in water.

Applications

The principal use of silver is as a precious metal and its halide salts, especially silver nitrate, are also widely used in photography. The major outlets are photography, the electrical and electronic industries and for domestic uses as cutlery, jewellery and mirrors.
Both colour and black and white images have relied on silver since the early days of photography: siver bromide and silver iodide are sensitive to light. When light strikes a film coated with one of these compounds, some of the silver ions revert to the metal in tiny nuclei and the film is developed with a reducing agent which causes more silver to deposit on these nuclei. When the negative has the desired intensity, the uneffected silver bromide or iodide is removed by dissoving in a fixing agent, leaving the image behind.
Silver is also employed in the electrical industry: printed circuits are made using silver paints, and computer keyboards use silver electrical contacts.
Silver's catalytic properties make it ideal for use as a catalyst in oxidation reactions. Other applications are in dentistry and in high-capacity zinc long-life batteries.

Source of description

http://www.lenntech.com/periodic/elements/ag.htm