Bazsites.com Gallium
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On the Web
- Visual Elements: Gallium - General and physical information, key isotopes, and ionisation energies.
- USGS Minerals Information: Gallium - Statistics and information on the worldwide supply, demand, and flow of the element. [PDF]
- Gallium - Data tables and historic information.
- Discovery of Gallium - Article by P.E. Lecoq de Boisbaudran.
- Wikipedia: Gallium - Properties of the element, including its history, applications, and characteristics.
- Gallium-Arsenide Manufacturing Technology - The annual International Gallium-Arsenide (GaAs) Manufacturing Technology Conference
- ChemGlobe: Gallium - Electronic, thermal, and steric data along with an isotope table.
- LANL: Gallium - Sources, properties, uses, and costs.
- Lenntech: Gallium - Physical data, chemical properties, health and environmental effects.
- WebElements: Gallium - Extensive information on history, uses, occurrence, compounds, and properties of the element.
Wikipedia Articles
- Gallium scan - A gallium scan or gallium 67 scan is a type of nuclear medicine that uses a radioactive tracer to obtain images of a specific type of tissue, or disease state of tissue. Gallium salts like gallium citrate and gallium nitrate are used.
- Gallium halides - There are three sets of gallium halides, the trihalides where gallium has oxidation state +3, the intermediate halides containing gallium in oxidation states +1, +2 and +3 and some unstable monohalides, where gallium has oxidation state +1.
- Aluminium gallium phosphide - Aluminium gallium phosphide (, also GaAlP), a phosphide of aluminium and gallium, is a semiconductor material. It is an alloy of aluminium phosphide and gallium phosphide.
- Gallium arsenide phosphide - Gallium arsenide phosphide () is a semiconductor material, an alloy of gallium arsenide and gallium phosphide.
- Indium gallium phosphide - Indium gallium phosphide (InGaP) is a semiconductor composed of indium, gallium and phosphorus. It is used in high-power and high-frequency electronics because of its superior electron velocity with respect to the more common semiconductors silicon and gallium arsenide.