purification of tin by liquation method
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Explanation:
in this method a low melting metal like tin can be made to flow on a slopy surface to separate it from high melting impurities
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GOOD MORNING BUDDY,
Liquation is a metallurgical method for separating metals from an ore or alloy. The material must be heated until one of the metals starts to melt and drain away from the other and can be collected.
Tin is extracted by roasting the mineral casseterite with carbon in a furnace to approximately 2500 degrees Fahrenheit. The next step involves leaching with acid or water solutions to remove impurities. Electrostatic or magnetic separation helps to remove any heavy metal impurities
The principal tin mineral is cassiterite, or tinstone (SnO2), a naturally occurring oxide of tin containing about 78.8 percent tin.
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