AlGa
AlGa (Aluminum-Gallium) is a degenerate alloy that results from liquid gallium infiltrating the crystal structure of aluminium metal. The resulting alloy is very weak and brittle, being broken under the most minute pressure. The alloy is also chemically weaker, as the gallium inhibits the aluminium from forming a protective oxide layer.
Uses
The alloy can be reacted with water to form hydrogen gas, aluminium oxide and gallium metal. [1] Normally, aluminium does not react with water, since it is instantly covered with aluminium oxide when exposed to air. AlGa is able to create aluminium nanoparticles for the hydrogen producing reaction.[2]
Safety concerns
Due to AlGa's extreme lack of structural integrity and inability to form a protective oxide layer, gallium metal is considered to be corrosive. If AlGa were to form on an aluminum structure, the aforementioned structure could weaken or collapse. Gallium is illegal to transport on aircraft as it could compromise the integrity of the aluminium hull.
References
- "New process generates hydrogen from aluminum alloy to run engines, fuel cells". Phys.org. 2007-05-16.
- "Easy aluminum nanoparticles for rapid, efficient hydrogen generation from water". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 6 March 2022.