I do not know i am asking from you
It is a hall that people have conferences in.
The Hall effect is the production of a voltage difference (the Hall voltage) across an electrical conductor, transverse to an electric current in the conductor and a magnetic field perpendicular to the current. It was discovered by Edwin Hall in 1879
Hall Signal Company ended in 1925.
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Yes; this is the Hall-Heroult process.
Hall discovered how to extract aluminum by using the electrolysis process in 1886. This process involves passing an electric current through a molten mixture of aluminum oxide and cryolite, resulting in the separation of aluminum from oxygen. This method revolutionized the production of aluminum and is still used today.
Paul Louis Toussaint Heroult in 1886 the same year when Martin Charles Hall developed the technique in America
It was invented in 1886 by Charles Hall in America and Paul Heroult in France.
because they are good conductors of electricity and do not react with the electrolytes
as graphite is a good conductor of electricity...........
Because due to the exponential gravitational section of the geometric oscillation in the midst of transnational confrigiration, the diocese and several objects accelerating at a rapid velocity, IT IS PHYSICALLY IMPOSSIBLE.
Danish physician Hans Christian Orsted in 1825. During this time, aluminum was extremely expensive (about the same as silver) so it wasn't used outside of very expensive items such as statues or dinnerware until the Hall-Heroult process, the process used to obtain it from ores today, was developed in 1886.
Aluminum is not found in nature in its pure state (in other words, it does not exist an "aluminum mine"...) but it is always bond with other elements, the most common being the oxygen. Among the most common aluminum ore there is the alumina, chemical formula Al2O3. The alumina is found in nature most of the time in a kind of soil named bauxite, after the city of Baux in France, where it was first identified. It contains on average 50% in weight of alumina, the rest being other oxides, mainly iron oxides. With the Hall-Heroult process, through the use of electricity, the chemical bond between aluminum and oxygen in the alumina is broken and the aluminum is then collected for further processing. The process was discovered at the same time, 1886, and independently by american Charles Martin Hall and french Paul Louis Toussaint Heroult (this the reason why it is called Hall-Heroult process). Nowadays, after more than 100 years, the industrial process is basically the same invented by Hall and Heroult. Going more in detail, in the Hall-Heroult process the alumina is dissolved in a molten salt, acting as the electrolyte, called cryolite (Na3AlF6) which melts at around 950°C. The molten salt is contained in a vessel (called cell or pot) with the structure made by iron and internally lined with blocks of carbon. The mixture of molten cryolite and dissolved alumina is usually called bath. Into the bath is immersed the anode, another block of carbon, which carries the electrical current into the molten bath driving the electrochemical reactions which make the alumina reduction according to the reaction: 2Al2O3 + 3C -> 4Al + 3CO2 The molten aluminum produced is collected into the bottom of the vessel containing the bath and periodically is tapped. The electricity flowing from the anode into the bath is then collected by the carbon lining of the vessel. As can be seen on the previous reaction, the carbon anodes takes itself place on the reaction, being consumed and evolving carbon dioxide in the form of bubbles from the bath. This means that the anode has to be replaced on a regular basis. The chemical bond between aluminum and oxygen in the alumina is very strong, and this means that a lot of electrical energy is required to produce aluminum. The values depends on the cell technology, ranging from 12.5 to 14.5 kWh/kg in present industry.
Fluorine is typically produced through the electrolysis of molten potassium fluoride (KF) and hydrogen fluoride (HF) in an industrial process known as the Hall-Heroult process. This process involves passing an electric current through the molten salts, causing fluorine gas to be released at the anode. Alternatively, fluorine can also be produced by reacting hydrogen fluoride with certain compounds like cobalt trifluoride or antimony trifluoride.
Aluminium is produced by electrolysis of the mineral bauxite. In Napoleonic times there was no cheap electricity :P Aluminum metal was rare because the Hall-Heroult process of running electricity through molten cryolite had not been discovered yet. Aluminum could only be produced with very small yield before this. Aluminum compounds such as bauxite are plentiful, but it is incredibly rare to find ores containing elemental aluminum.
In 1886, Charles M. Hall perfected the Hall Process, A practical method for producing aluminum cheaply and in commercial quantities.