You are seeing Web search results for indium on Ask.com
|
|
Indium Corporation of America is an ISO 9001-registered developer, manufacturer, and supplier of specialty alloys, solders, and thermal interface materials. ... Indium Corporation offers a full range of Semiconductor Packaging and Power Semiconductor Packaging Materials.
|
||
|
Indium - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
||
|
This WebElements periodic table page contains Essential information for the element indium ... Brief description: indium is a very soft, silvery-white metal with a brilliant lustre. The pure metal gives a high-pitched "scream" when bent. It wets glass, as does gallium. It is useful for making low-melting alloys.
|
||
|
The Element Indium - Basic Physical and Historical Information ... Indium was discovered by the German chemists Ferdinand Reich and Hieronymus Theodor Richter in 1863. Reich and Richter had been looking for traces of the element thallium in samples of zinc ores. A brilliant indigo line in the sample's spectrum revealed...
|
||
|
Info and Facts about the element Indium from the Periodic Table. Interesting Facts, information about Indium the element. Concise facts and info about Indium ... The element Indium and the Periodic Table; Find out more facts about Indium on the Periodic Table which arranges every chemical element according to its atomic...
|
||
|
The Indium and Octreotide studies the I have in the Indium file are indeed fascinating. I haven't told the full story of my investigation into this area but it is an intriguing story. I'm particularly happy that you have brought this up again because I just went back into the file and started to re-read the abstracts.
|
||
|
Indium hydride (Cl2InH) was generated by the transmetalation of InCl3 with Et3SiH. In the previously reported system (NaBH4-InCl3), the coexistent borane can cause side reactions. The use of Et3SiH instead of NaBH4 affords effective hydroindation of alkynes.
|
||
|
Indium was discovered in 1863. It is a rare metal found as a trace element in zinc and lead sulfide ores. Therefore, zinc refineries are the world's major source of indium. Over a thousand kilograms of indium are recovered each year from the flue dust of zinc refineries.
|
||
|
Indium is used for coating high speed bearings, transistors, rectifiers, thermistors, and photoconductors. Indium is also used in low melting alloys. An alloy of 24% indium and 76% gallium is a liquid at room temperature.
|


