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  2. List of brazing alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_brazing_alloys

    Free-flowing, most fluid of aluminium filler metals. General purpose filler metal, can be used with brazeable aluminiums in all types of brazing. For joining aluminium and its alloys. Can be used for joining aluminium and titanium to dissimilar metals; the risk of galvanic corrosion then has to be considered.

  3. Brazing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazing

    For copper, silver, nickel, copper-phosphorus and copper-zinc filler metals. Nitrogen+hydrogen+carbon monoxide Cryogenic or purified (AWS type 6B). 70–99% N 2, 2–20% H 2, 1–10% CO. For copper, silver, nickel, copper-phosphorus and copper-zinc filler metals. For brazing copper, brass, low-nickel alloys, medium and high carbon steels. Nitrogen

  4. Hardnesses of the elements (data page) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardnesses_of_the_elements...

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  5. Template:List of oxidation states of the elements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:List_of_oxidation...

    The oxidation states are also maintained in articles of the elements (of course), and systematically in the table {{Infobox element/symbol-to-oxidation-state}} See also [ edit ]

  6. Carbon monoxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_monoxide

    Carbon monoxide is a strong reductive agent and has been used in pyrometallurgy to reduce metals from ores since ancient times. Carbon monoxide strips oxygen off metal oxides, reducing them to pure metal in high temperatures, forming carbon dioxide in the process. Carbon monoxide is not usually supplied as is, in the gaseous phase, in the ...

  7. Van der Waals constants (data page) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_der_Waals_constants...

    Carbon dioxide: 3.640 0.04267 Carbon disulfide: 11.77 0.07685 Carbon monoxide: 1.505 0.0398500 Carbon tetrachloride: 19.7483 0.1281 Chlorine: 6.579 0.05622

  8. Oxocarbon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxocarbon

    [1] [2] The simplest and most common oxocarbons are carbon monoxide (CO) and carbon dioxide (CO 2). Many other stable (practically if not thermodynamically) or metastable oxides of carbon are known, but they are rarely encountered, such as carbon suboxide ( C 3 O 2 or O=C=C=C=O ) and mellitic anhydride ( C 12 O 9 ).

  9. Carbonyl metallurgy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbonyl_metallurgy

    These are metal-ligand complexes where carbon monoxide is bonded to individual atoms of metals . Iron carbonyl is stable as iron pentacarbonyl , where five carbon monoxide molecules are pendently bonded to the iron atom, while nickel carbonyl is stable as nickel tetracarbonyl, which has four carbon monoxide molecules pendantly bonded [ jargon ...