BI
Bi is the chemical symbol for bismuth, a brittle, silvery‑white post‑transition metal with atomic number 83. Bismuth forms a distinctive oxide surface that can display iridescent rainbow colors. It is highly diamagnetic and has relatively low thermal and electrical conductivity for a metal. Bismuth occurs mainly in minerals such as bismuthinite and bismite and is rarely found in native form. It melts at 271.4°C and boils at 1564°C. Bismuth is used in low‑melting alloys, lead‑free solders, and certain cosmetics pigments. It also appears in medicines as bismuth subsalicylate, the active ingredient in some stomach remedies. Bismuth compounds are generally considered among the less toxic heavy metals. The heaviest naturally occurring isotope, bismuth‑209, long regarded as stable, is now understood to be extremely weakly radioactive with a very long half‑life.
Bi is also a common shorthand for bisexual, an orientation characterized by attraction to more than one
Bi‑ is a Latin prefix meaning two or twice. It is used across disciplines to denote duality