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- Tin - Wikipedia
β-tin, also called white tin, is the allotrope (structural form) of elemental tin that is stable at and above room temperature It is metallic and malleable, and has body-centered tetragonal crystal structure α-tin, or gray tin, is the nonmetallic form
- Taxpayer identification numbers (TIN) | Internal Revenue Service
A Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) is an identification number used by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the administration of tax laws It is issued either by the Social Security Administration (SSA) or by the IRS
- Tin | Definition, Properties, Uses, Facts | Britannica
Tin, a chemical element belonging to the carbon family, Group 14 (IVa) of the periodic table It is a soft, silvery white metal with a bluish tinge, known to the ancients in bronze, an alloy with copper
- Tin Definition, Facts, Symbol, Discovery, Property, Uses
Tin (pronunciation: TIN) is a soft, malleable, silvery-white element classified as a post-transition metal in the periodic table and it is represented by the chemical symbol Sn [1, 2, 3]
- TIN Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of TIN is a soft faintly bluish-white lustrous low-melting crystalline metallic element with atomic number 50 that is malleable and ductile at ordinary temperatures and that is used especially in containers, as a protective coating, in tinfoil, and in soft solders and alloys —often used before another noun
- Tin | Sn (Element) - PubChem
Chemical element, Tin, information from authoritative sources Look up properties, history, uses, and more
- Tin - New World Encyclopedia
Tin is also used in solders for joining pipes or electric circuits, in bearing alloys, glass-making, and a wide range of tin chemical applications The use of pure tin or tin alloyed with other metals in these applications is rapidly supplanting the use of lead-containing alloys, to eliminate the problems of toxicity caused by lead
- Tin - Introduction to the chemical element and its compounds
What is tin? Tin is a silvery white metal that lives in group IV of the periodic table of chemical elements To look at it, you'd never know that it was (according to archeologists) one of the earliest and most important metals in human history! [1]
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