How Chemically Stable Are Tungsten Beads?

        Tungsten beads are chemically stable and almost immune to most common chemical media at room temperature. However, they will react significantly in high-temperature oxidizing atmospheres or certain highly corrosive mixed acids.

        1. Tolerance to Inorganic Acids (Room Temperature)

        Common Inorganic Acids: Highly resistant to hydrochloric acid (any concentration), sulfuric acid (dilute-concentrated), nitric acid (dilute-concentrated), phosphoric acid, and aqua regia (cold/room temperature) at room temperature.

        Hot concentrated nitric acid and hot concentrated sulfuric acid: May cause slight surface oxidation, but not significant dissolution.

        Hydrofluoric acid: Slow corrosion when used alone.

        Mixed solution of hydrofluoric acid (HF) and concentrated nitric acid (HNO?): Dissolves tungsten relatively quickly at room temperature. The reaction is vigorous, releasing heat and nitrogen oxide gases, and rapidly forming soluble tungsten-fluorine complexes (such as [WF?]2? or related compounds).

        CTIA GROUP tungsten beads image

        2. Tolerance to Alkalis

        Dilute alkaline solutions (NaOH, KOH aqueous solutions, room temperature): Virtually no reaction.

        Concentrated alkaline solutions (room temperature): Extremely slow reaction or no significant corrosion.

        Molten strong alkali + oxidizing agent (e.g., KNO?, Na?O?, KClO?, etc. added to NaOH/KOH melt): Rapid corrosion, forming tungstates.

        This is the most vulnerable condition for tungsten in alkaline media, commonly used in industrial tungsten recycling.

        3. Reaction with Halogens/Nonmetals

        Fluorine (F?): Reacts directly and violently at room temperature, forming volatile tungsten hexafluoride (WF?) (colorless gas, highly toxic).

        Chlorine (Cl?): Reacts above approximately 250℃, forming tungsten hexachloride (WCl?) (dark blue solid).

        Bromine (Br?): Similar to chlorine, forming WBr? at approximately 250–300℃. Iodine (I?): Reacts slowly under red heat, forming low-valent iodides.

        Others: Reacts with carbon at high temperatures to form tungsten carbide (WC, W?C), and with sulfur to form tungsten sulfide (WS?).

        CTIA GROUP tungsten beads image

        4. Reactions with Other Media

        Water/Moist Air: Completely stable at room temperature, does not hydrolyze or rust.

        Hydrogen (H?): Does not react even at high temperatures; tungsten is one of the few metals that does not absorb hydrogen.

        Hydrogen Peroxide (H?O?): Slowly dissolves tungsten, commonly used in analytical chemistry for sample dissolution.

        Organic Acids/Organic Solvents: Virtually unreacted.

        Molten Salts: Some molten oxidizing salts (such as Na?O?) will rapidly oxidize and dissolve.

        Comments are closed.

        Address: 3F, No.25-1 WH Rd., Xiamen Software Park Ⅱ, FJ 361008,China Copyright ? 1997 - 2026 CTIA All Rights Reserved
        Phone:+86-592-5129696,+86-592-5129595;    Email: [email protected]
        舊版

              特级西西人体444w w w | 免费网站啪啪 | 少妇精品在线 | 精品五月丁香婷婷一区 | 色日本黄色视频 | 内射免费视频 | 免费看黄色A片 | 思瑞与土豪国产一区二区 | 国产亚洲 久一区二区草榴AV | www.人人操 |