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Chemistry

Metals: Extraction, Alloys, and Applications

PDF
Matthew Williams
|May 15, 2026|6 min read
AlloysBlast FurnaceCSEC ChemistryExtractionMetalsPaper 01Paper 02Section C

Methods of metal extraction linked to the reactivity series, the blast furnace extraction of iron, electrolytic extraction of aluminium, alloys and their properties and uses, essential roles of metals in living systems, and harmful effects of toxic metals.

How a metal is extracted from its ore, what alloys it forms, and whether it is essential or toxic to living things all follow from its chemistry. The reactivity series determines the extraction method; the structure of an alloy determines its improved properties; and the chemistry of heavy metals explains their toxicity.

Extraction of Metals

The method of extraction depends on position in the reactivity series. Reactive metals hold their electrons weakly but lose them easily to form stable compounds — this means a lot of energy is required to reverse this and reclaim the metal.

PositionExtraction methodExamples
Above carbon (very reactive)Electrolysis of molten compoundK, Na, Ca, Mg, Al
Below carbon (moderately reactive)Reduction by carbon or CO in a blast furnaceZn, Fe, Pb
Below hydrogen (unreactive)Found native; heated or chemically reducedCu, Ag, Au

Extraction of Iron (Blast Furnace)

Two extraction processes come up repeatedly on the syllabus: iron, which sits below carbon and can be reduced by carbon monoxide, and aluminium, which sits above carbon and must be extracted by electrolysis.

Iron is extracted from iron ore (haematite, Fe₂O₃) by reduction with carbon monoxide in a blast furnace. Coke (carbon), iron ore, and limestone are fed in at the top; hot air is blasted in at the bottom.

Key reactions:

  1. Carbon burns to form CO₂: C+O2→CO2\text{C} + \text{O}_2 \rightarrow \text{CO}_2C+O2​→CO2​
  2. CO₂ reacts with more coke to form CO: CO2+C→2CO\text{CO}_2 + \text{C} \rightarrow 2\text{CO}CO2​+C→2CO
  3. CO reduces iron oxide: Fe2O3+3CO→2Fe+3CO2\text{Fe}_2\text{O}_3 + 3\text{CO} \rightarrow 2\text{Fe} + 3\text{CO}_2Fe2​O3​+3CO→2Fe+3CO2​
  4. Limestone removes silica impurities as slag:

CaCO3→CaO+CO2\text{CaCO}_3 \rightarrow \text{CaO} + \text{CO}_2CaCO3​→CaO+CO2​

CaO+SiO2→CaSiO3(slag)\text{CaO} + \text{SiO}_2 \rightarrow \text{CaSiO}_3 \quad \text{(slag)}CaO+SiO2​→CaSiO3​(slag)

Molten iron sinks to the bottom and is tapped off. The product is pig iron, which is brittle due to its high carbon content (~4%). It is converted to steel by controlled oxidation to reduce carbon content to 0.1–1.5%.

Extraction of Aluminium

Because aluminium is above carbon in the reactivity series, carbon cannot reduce it. Electrolysis is the only option.

Aluminium is above carbon in the reactivity series, so carbon cannot reduce it. It is extracted by electrolysis of molten aluminium oxide. Key points:

  • Ore is bauxite (Al₂O₃, aluminium oxide)
  • Bauxite is dissolved in molten cryolite to lower the melting point from ~2000 °C to ~950 °C
  • The molten mixture is electrolysed: Al³⁺ is reduced at the cathode, O²⁻ is oxidised at the carbon anodes
  • Carbon anodes burn away as they react with the oxygen produced: C+O2→CO2\text{C} + \text{O}_2 \rightarrow \text{CO}_2C+O2​→CO2​

The high energy cost of electrolysis makes aluminium more expensive to produce than iron despite aluminium being more abundant in the Earth's crust.

Alloys

Pure metals are rarely used as extracted. Most applications need something stronger, harder, or more corrosion-resistant than any single pure metal provides, which is why alloys exist.

Pure metals are often too soft or too brittle for practical uses. Mixing metals (or adding non-metals) produces alloys with improved properties.

AlloyCompositionPropertiesUses
SteelIron + carbon (0.1–1.5%)Stronger and harder than pure ironConstruction, tools, vehicles
Stainless steelIron + chromium + nickelCorrosion resistantCutlery, kitchen equipment, surgical instruments
Aluminium alloysAl + Cu, Mg, or MnLight but much stronger than pure AlAircraft, bicycles, packaging
SolderLead + tinLow melting pointJoining electronic components
BrassCopper + zincHarder than Cu, good corrosion resistancePipes, musical instruments

Alloys have different properties from their component metals because the different-sized atoms disrupt the regular lattice arrangement, preventing layers from sliding over each other. This is why alloys are stronger and harder than pure metals.

Metals in Living Systems

Not all of this is industrial. Several metals are biologically essential, filling roles in living organisms that no other element can take over.

Metals play essential biological roles:

MetalRole
Iron (Fe)Central atom in haemoglobin — carries oxygen in red blood cells
Magnesium (Mg)Central atom in chlorophyll — essential for photosynthesis
Calcium (Ca)Bone and teeth structure; muscle contraction; nerve signalling
Zinc (Zn)Trace element; cofactor for many enzymes
Sodium (Na) and Potassium (K)Nerve impulse transmission; fluid balance

Harmful Effects of Toxic Metals

Some metals are toxic rather than essential. What makes heavy metals resistant and durable also means they accumulate in living tissue rather than breaking down.

MetalSource of exposureEffects
Lead (Pb)Old paint, car exhaust (from leaded petrol), old plumbingNeurotoxin; damages brain development in children; causes learning difficulties
Mercury (Hg)Broken thermometers, coal combustion, fishAffects nervous system; methylmercury accumulates in fish and through the food chain
Cadmium (Cd)Battery disposal, cigarette smoke, contaminated soilsKidney damage; causes itai-itai disease (bone softening)
Arsenic (As)Mining waste, contaminated groundwaterCarcinogenic; causes skin lesions and organ damage

Heavy metals are particularly dangerous because they are not biodegradable — they accumulate in organisms (bioaccumulation) and become more concentrated at higher trophic levels in a food chain (biomagnification).

Previous in syllabus order
Metals: Properties and Reactivity
Next in syllabus order
Non-metals and Gas Preparation