Melting point of 40% Sn and 60% Pb

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the melting point of a mixture of 40% tin (Sn) and 60% lead (Pb), particularly in the context of its application for soldering utensils used in cooking. Participants explore the melting point calculations, the properties of the Sn-Pb alloy, and the implications of using such a mixture for food-related applications.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested
  • Experimental/applied

Main Points Raised

  • One participant requests the melting point of a Sn-Pb mixture, indicating a practical application for soldering.
  • Another participant questions whether the inquiry is about a theoretical calculation or a specific eutectic value.
  • A participant expresses confusion about terminology and the implications of using lead in cooking utensils, acknowledging potential health concerns.
  • One participant proposes a calculation for the melting point based on weighted averages of the individual melting points of Sn and Pb, suggesting a result of 289 °C.
  • Another participant challenges the simplicity of this calculation, noting that Sn-Pb is not an ideal mixture and references phase diagrams for more accurate melting point information.
  • Discussion includes the eutectic temperature of the mixture, with values ranging from 175-238 °C, and questions why this temperature is lower than the melting points of the individual metals.
  • Participants discuss colligative properties and interspecific interactions, emphasizing that melting points cannot be simply calculated as averages due to complex interactions in mixtures.
  • One participant mentions that melting point is a measured property and discusses the potential for interpolation in homologous series, contrasting it with the challenges of calculating melting points for complex mixtures.
  • There is a discussion about the applicability of algorithms for predicting melting points in biological molecules, with a participant noting that such algorithms are designed for specific conditions.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the calculation of melting points for the Sn-Pb mixture, with some proposing simple calculations while others argue for the complexity of real mixtures. There is no consensus on the best approach to determine the melting point or the implications of using the alloy for cooking utensils.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the complexity of interactions in the Sn-Pb alloy, the dependence on phase diagrams for accurate melting point determination, and the unresolved nature of the calculations proposed by participants.

Monique
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Who can calculate the meltingpoint for me of a mixture of metals with 40% Sn and 60% Pb?
 
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From first principles? Or, did you just want a value for the Sn-Pb eutectic?
 
Originally posted by Bystander
From first principles? Or, did you just want a value for the Sn-Pb eutectic?
Euhh, I have no clue what that means :) The substance I am asking for is soudage (a complete foreign word to me, I had to look it up in a dictionary)

The case is the following: my dad wants to solder (?) a .. euhh, thing with which you can scoop french fries out of the pan with .. euhh, not oil, frying greace (?). So he asked me what the melting point of the soudage is, since frying is done at high temperatures.

Boy, it is not always easy speaking English :O I am sorry :)

Ofcourse I am going to tell him that it is not smart to use a metal with 60% Pb on a utensil with which you make food, but I was wondering whether the principle works :)
 
I think the dictionary gave me the french word for some reason (soudage) I think it is just solder :) I thought something was wrong with that word :)
 
I looked it up myself (it was too late last night)

Is the answer as simple as 0.6 * 327.5 (Tm Pb) + 0.4 * 231.9 (Tm Sn)?
Which would be 289 oC.

French fries are fried at 165-190 oC so it would work :)
 
Sn-Pb is NOT an ideal mixture; go to http://www.tpub.com/steelworker1/57.htm for a phase diagram and brief description of the system behavior --- or to http://www.turbobraze.co.uk/alloysssa.htm for a list of compositions and m.p. ranges.

Bottom line? The eutectic temperature is 175-180 C, 60-40 has a m.p. range that starts at only a slightly higher temperature --- your daddy is looking for hot grease all over the kitchen. Brazing or silver-soldering is going to make for much happier results. (Plumbing shops should be able to steer you to decently priced Ag solders --- stronger, nicer to work with, more corrosion resistant, and easier cleaning in the kitchen.) The Pb toxicity issue isn't that big a deal unless he's planning on frying things with lots of acids or salt that might leave residues in the grease, corrode the Pb, then soak soluble lead into the next batch being cooked.
 
Last edited:
Ah! Thank you Bystander :)

But why is the eutectic temperature so much lower than the melting temperatures of the individual metals, and why is my little calculation so far off?

Pb mp = 372.5
Sn mp = 231.9

40/60 Sn/Pb eutectic temp 183-238
 
Originally posted by Monique
Ah! Thank you Bystander :)

But why is the eutectic temperature so much lower than the melting temperatures of the individual metals,


"Why" do positive and negative azeotropes exhibit b.p.s higher/lower than those of the pure components? Same situation, different phases --- solid-liquid solution equilibrium rather than vapor-liquid.
and why is my little calculation so far off?

Melting points of even ideal mixtures aren't going to be a composition weighted average --- and, definitely not a mass/weight weighted average. The colligative properties of the components are going to control ideal mixture m.p.s, and interspecific interactions have to be taken into account for real mixtures.
Pb mp = 372.5
Sn mp = 231.9

40/60 Sn/Pb eutectic temp 183-238

I'll be picky and correct you here --- the eutectic is the specific composition at the lowest T on the phase diagram --- it can be considered the m.p. of a compound, Sn4Pb, and the compositions of both the liquid and solid phases are identical; the melting "range" for other compositions is the range of temperature over which the solid phase(s) melt to yield a liquid phase the composition of which varies as T changes.
 
Thank you for correcting me, I am more into the chemistry of biological rather than metallic molecules :)

What do you mean by colligative properties and interspecific interactions?

So are you saying that m.p. can only be measured and not calculated? For DNA there are algorithms with why the meltingpoint can be calculated, where it is the function of the number of A, C, G, Ts and also how many runs of GGGG there are for instance or AAAA.

Is there something like that for other compounds?
 
  • #10
Colligative properties are those properties depending only upon concentrations of solutes in a solution --- clumsy wording --- for instance, you've run into osmometric determinations of molecular weights of quite a few biological molecules; dissolve a known weight of substance in some suitable solvent, determine the reduction in the solvent vapor pressure as a result of the solution process, and from knowledge of the solvent's colligative properties (determined from enthalpies of phase changes at particular temperatures plus a little van't Hoff magic) out pops the number of moles of solute in the solution. You've got the weight, now you know how many moles, and voila! a molecular weight. Same game for freezing point depression, osmotic pressure, and whatever else that's slipped my mind at the moment.

By interspecific interactions, I mean the various molecular interactions, in the solder case, tin with lead, and the intraspecific interactions tin-tin and lead-lead; these are non-zero, and yield some very interesting behaviors in mixed or multi-component systems.

Melting point is a measured property. Given a homologous series, say odd numbered (or even) straight chain saturated hydrocarbons, the melting points (and other physical properties) of missing (data-wise) members of the series can be interpolated from known data for higher and lower MW members. There are similar correlations for invariant structures subject to modifications of functional groups from limited sets --- the DNA vs. base pair game you mention. These are NOT based on any rigorous analysis of intermolecular potential functions. In principle, calculations of melting points and vapor pressures are possible; in practice, no one has the foggiest idea what an intermolecular potential function looks like, let alone how to handle it mathematically.

The DNA correlation depends upon probably hundreds to thousands of measurements; these have since been correlated to three independent variables, and since most DNA does not depart significantly from the ranges of base fractions for the original correlation, it works. I'd be very surprised if the correlation did NOT fail for "synthetic" DNAs of repeated short sequences, or the single base cases (except, a single base DNA can't be made to pair with itself in the helix), so make that single "base-pair" cases.
 
  • #11
Thank you SO much Bystander, for explaining all that to me. It is much clearer to me now.

"The DNA correlation depends upon probably hundreds to thousands of measurements; these have since been correlated to three independent variables, and since most DNA does not depart significantly from the ranges of base fractions for the original correlation, it works. I'd be very surprised if the correlation did NOT fail for "synthetic" DNAs of repeated short sequences, or the single base cases (except, a single base DNA can't be made to pair with itself in the helix), so make that single "base-pair" cases."

You would NOT be surprised if the algorithms would fail for short synthetic DNAs? :) Actually, those algorithms were specifically made for short molecules (usually around 20 bp) in low concentration solutions. And single bases cannot 'melt' :) so no, it would apply there.
 
  • #12
Now, I learned something --- they've played with short string syntheses for physical property measurements; in any case, application of the algorithm outside the ranges of base compositions, or chain lengths is getting into "iffy" territory.

The question came up in context other than PF regarding enthalpies, entropies, and free energies of formation of nucleic acids --- anybody got any decent measurements on these?
 

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