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Key Documents

GF53840099

Tungsten

foil, 0.2m coil, thickness 0.10mm, coil width .9mm, as rolled, 99.95%

Synonym(s):

Tungsten, W 000279, W

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About This Item

Empirical Formula (Hill Notation):
W
CAS Number:
Molecular Weight:
183.84
MDL number:
UNSPSC Code:
12141747
PubChem Substance ID:
NACRES:
NA.23

Assay

99.95%

form

foil

manufacturer/tradename

Goodfellow 538-400-99

resistivity

4.9 μΩ-cm, 20°C

L × thickness × width

0.2 m × 0.10 mm × 0.9 mm

bp

5660 °C (lit.)

mp

3410 °C (lit.)

density

19.3 g/mL at 25 °C (lit.)

SMILES string

[W]

InChI

1S/W

InChI key

WFKWXMTUELFFGS-UHFFFAOYSA-N

General description

For updated SDS information please visit www.goodfellow.com.

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J R Marbach et al.
Physics in medicine and biology, 26(3), 435-443 (1981-05-01)
Curves relating beam energy, scattering foil thickness, central-axis depth-dose, and beam flatness have been generated using data taken on a Siemens 200A betatron. The curve set allows a single combination of tungsten foil thickness and electron beam energy to be
Congshang Wan et al.
Ultramicroscopy, 119, 106-110 (2011-11-15)
Thermionic electron emission from 200 to 500 nm thick coatings of scandium oxide on tungsten foil have been examined in thermionic emission microscopy, spectroscopic photoelectron microcopy, synchrotron radiation and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS). A clear dependence of the scandium oxide-W
P Thongkumkoon et al.
Toxicology letters, 226(1), 90-97 (2014-02-08)
The toxicity of nanomaterials has been well known, but mechanisms involved have been little known. This study was aimed at looking at direct interaction between nanomaterials and naked DNA for some fundamental understanding. Two different types of nanomaterials, carbon nanotubes
Synthetic analogues and reaction systems relevant to the molybdenum and tungsten oxotransferases.
John H Enemark et al.
Chemical reviews, 104(2), 1175-1200 (2004-02-12)
Mark L Witten et al.
Chemico-biological interactions, 196(3), 87-88 (2011-12-21)
There is emerging evidence that tungsten has toxic health effects. We summarize the recent tungsten toxicity research in this short review. Tungsten is widely used in many commercial and military applications because it has the second highest melting temperature of

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