Metals conduct electricity in the SOLID state โ unlike ionic compounds which only conduct when molten or dissolved. This is because metallic conduction uses DELOCALISED ELECTRONS (which are already free to move in the solid), whereas ionic conduction requires ions to move (which they can't do when fixed in a solid lattice).
๐ Key Note
Metallic structure: positive ions + delocalised electrons. High MP/BP, malleable, ductile (layers slide). Conducts electricity AND heat in solid state (delocalised electrons). Alloys: different-sized atoms disrupt regular lattice โ harder. Steel, bronze, brass are key examples.
๐ฏ Matching Activity โ Metal or Alloy โ Property Match
Match each substance to its key property and use. โ drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.
Copper
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Steel
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Bronze
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Aluminium alloys
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Stainless steel
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Iron + carbon โ harder than pure iron โ used in construction and tools
Iron + chromium + nickel โ resists corrosion โ used in cutlery and surgical instruments
Lightweight and strong โ used in aircraft construction
Copper + tin โ harder than pure copper โ used in bearings and statues
Best common electrical conductor โ used in wiring and circuits
๐ฏ Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. Why can metals conduct electricity in the solid state, but ionic compounds cannot?
2. Why is brass (copper + zinc) harder than pure copper?
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