Titanium is used in steel as an alloying element (ferro-titanium) to reduce grain size and as a deoxidizer, and in stainless steel to reduce carbon content.Titanium is often alloyed with aluminium (to refine grain size), vanadium, copper (to harden), iron, manganese, molybdenum, and with other metals; Applications for titanium mill products (sheet, plate, bar, wire, forgings, castings) can be found in industrial, aerospace, recreational, and emerging markets. Powdered titanium is used in pyrotechnics as a source of bright-burning particles.
Yes. It is a semimetal.
Semiconductor.
arsenic
Yes.
yes
Tie-Tain- e- um and there you have the word Titanium
No. It is an example of a metallic covalent bond
For example. If titanium is turning liquid at 1650 C, then maybe 10 C lower will cause it to reharden or freeze.
Titanium and zirconium, for example, are resistant to corrosion in seawater.
Titanium is a pure element not an alloy.
No, titanium is a metal.
It is an example of an element, and of a non-metal.
Silicon Germanium
Silicon?
Tie-Tain- e- um and there you have the word Titanium
No. It is an example of a metallic covalent bond
For example. If titanium is turning liquid at 1650 C, then maybe 10 C lower will cause it to reharden or freeze.
It is called as DOPING. Doping is the process in which you add an impurity to a pure semiconductor to increase its conductivity. While doping is done, crystal structure of semiconductor is not disturbed.
It is a semiconductor.
An n-type semiconductor is formed by doping a pure semiconductor (silicon or germanium, for example) with atoms of a Group V element, typically phosphorus or arsenic. The dopant may be introduced when the crystal is formed or later, by diffusion or ion implantation.
For example titanium (electrolysis in water solution).
For example titanium dioxide (TiO2) is a stable and nontoxic compound.