Aluminium - Enviromnental Health Criteria 194

Aluminium is a silvery-white, ductile and malleable metal. It belongs to group IIIA of the Periodic Table, and in compounds it is usually found as AlIII. It forms about 8% of the earth's crust and is one of the most reactive of the common metals. Exposure to water, oxygen or other oxidants leads to the formation of a superficial coating of aluminium oxide, which provides the metal with a high resistance to corrosion. Aluminium oxide is soluble in mineral acids and strong alkalis but insoluble in water, whereas aluminium chloride, nitrate and sulfate are water soluble. Aluminium halogenides, hydride and lower aluminium alkyls react violently with water. Aluminium possesses high electrical and thermal conductivity, low density and great resistance to corrosion. It is often alloyed with other metals. Aluminium alloys are light, strong and readily machined into shapes.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Additional Info

Field Value
Source https://wedocs.unep.org/20.500.11822/29470
Author Economy Division
Maintainer Economy Division
Last Updated January 25, 2023, 17:26 (UTC)
Created January 25, 2023, 17:26 (UTC)
GUID 02aeb9b1-62fc-4625-aa3f-4f572ff7bce7
Issued 2019-08-19T18:07:46Z
Language English
Modified 2022-10-17 18:26:41.534
Publisher name Economy Division
Theme Reports, Books and Booklets
data_type document
spatial Global