Home

Sn

Tin (Sn, atomic number 50) is a soft, silvery-white metal in group 14 of the periodic table. It occurs in two allotropes: white tin, which is stable at room temperature, and gray tin, which forms below about 13.2°C and is brittle, a transition that can cause tin pest in older samples. Tin's melting point is 231.93°C, and its boiling point is about 2,625°C. The surface rapidly forms a thin oxide layer that protects the metal from further corrosion.

Most tin is obtained from the ore cassiterite (tin oxide, SnO2). After mining, the ore is processed

Tin has a long history of use. The symbol Sn derives from the Latin stannum. In antiquity

Applications and isotopes: The dominant contemporary use of tin is in solder for electronics and electrical

by
gravity
separation
and
smelting,
followed
by
refining
to
produce
metallic
tin.
Major
producers
include
China
and
Indonesia,
with
significant
output
from
Peru
and
Russia;
tin
is
often
mined
as
a
byproduct
of
alluvial
deposits
and
hard
rock
mining.
tin
was
alloyed
with
copper
to
make
bronze,
a
key
step
in
the
Bronze
Age.
In
modern
times
tin
is
widely
used
in
coatings,
known
as
tinplate,
and
in
solders
for
electronics.
Tin
can
form
stable
alloys,
notably
bronze
(copper-tin)
and
pewter
(tin
with
copper,
antimony,
or
lead).
components,
especially
lead-free
solders.
Tin
coatings
protect
steel
cans
for
food
storage.
Tin
is
also
used
in
various
alloys,
catalysts,
and
glass
production.
Tin
has
ten
stable
isotopes—the
most
of
any
element—and
several
radioisotopes
are
used
in
scientific
research.