Examples of titanium in the following topics:
-
- Titanium is a strong, lustrous transition metal.
- Titanium was discovered in Cornwall, Great Britain, in 1791, by William Gregor.
- In its unalloyed condition, titanium is as strong as some steels, but 45% lighter.
- Titanium is one of the least dense, strong, and corrosion-resistant elements.
- Titanium is commonly used in airplanes, golf clubs, and other objects that must be strong but lightweight.
-
- Osseointegration is changing this by integrating a titanium armature with the remaining bone.
- The titanium and bone become an integrated unit that improves feeling and mobility when the prosthetic device is attached to the armature.
- For osseointegrated dental implants, metallic, ceramic, and polymeric materials have been used, in particular titanium.
- Clinical studies on mammals have shown that porous metals, such as titanium foam, may allow the formation of vascular systems within the porous area.
- This image shows a microscopic hisotlogical section of bone integrated to the titanium surface of a dental implant (black).
-
- The catalyst formed by reaction of triethylaluminum with titanium tetrachloride has been widely studied, but other metals (e.g.
- Polymerization of propylene through action of the titanium catalyst gives an isotactic product; whereas, a vanadium based catalyst gives a syndiotactic product.
-
- For example, the atomic mass of titanium is 47.88 amu or 47.88 g/mol.
- In 47.88 grams of titanium, there is one mole, or 6.022 x 1023 titanium atoms.
-
- Sharpless, Scripps Research Institute, has transformed this general epoxidation reaction into a powerful enantioselective procedure, by the addition of a chiral tartrate ester ligand to a titanium alkoxide catalyst.
- When mixed with one equivalent of diethyl tartrate, titanium tetraisopropoxide forms a dimeric complex with the loss of two isopropyl alcohol molecules.
- A proposed structure for this complex is shown in the first diagram below, with the titanium atoms colored green.
-
- Metals that can be found as native deposits singly and/or in alloys include antimony, arsenic, bismuth, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, indium, iron, nickel, selenium, tantalum, tellurium, tin, titanium, and zinc.
- Other significant metallic alloys are those of aluminium, titanium, copper, and magnesium.
- The alloys of aluminium, titanium, and magnesium are valued for their high strength-to-weight ratios, and magnesium can also provide electromagnetic shielding.
-
- Surgical drain on the left hand after surgery of Bennet's fracture basis MTC primi manus 1. sin (S62.20) which was treated by alignment of a fracture and inside fixation by two titanium screws MS.
-
- Sunscreens contain one or more of the following ingredients: organic chemical compounds that absorb ultraviolet light; inorganic particulates that reflect, scatter, and absorb UV light (such as titanium dioxide, zinc oxide, or a combination of both); organic particulates that mostly absorb light-like organic chemical compounds but contain multiple chromophores, may reflect and scatter a fraction of light like inorganic particulates, and behave differently in formulations than organic chemical compounds.
-
- As expected, the E-borinates give α:β-anti diastereomers exclusively, and the Z-titanium enolates strongly favor the α:β-syn family of isomers.
- Other combinations show diminished β:γ-syn selectivity, and in the case of the Z-titanium enolates anti-Felkin-Ahn selectivity narrowly predominates.
-