powered by CADENAS

Social Share

Hepatizon (9856 views - Material Database)

Hepatizon (Greek etymology: ἧπαρ, English translation: "liver"), also known as Black Corinthian Bronze, was a highly valuable metal alloy in classical antiquity. It is thought to be an alloy of copper with the addition of a small proportion of gold and silver (perhaps as little as 8% of each), mixed and treated to produce a material with a dark purplish patina, similar to the colour of liver. It is referred to in various ancient texts, but few known examples of hepatizon exist today. Of the known types of bronze or brass in classical antiquity (known in Latin as aes and in Greek as χαλκός), hepatizon was the second most valuable. Pliny the Elder mentions it in his Natural History, stating that it is less valuable than Corinthian bronze, which contained a greater proportion of gold or silver and as a result resembled the precious metals, but was esteemed before bronze from Delos and Aegina. As a result of its dark colour, it was particularly valued for statues. According to Pliny, the method of making it, like that for Corinthian bronze, had been lost for a long time. Similar alloys are found outside Europe. For example, shakudō is a Japanese billon of gold and copper with a characteristic dark blue-purple patina.
Go to Article

Hepatizon

Hepatizon

Hepatizon (Greek etymology: ἧπαρ, English translation: "liver"), also known as Black Corinthian Bronze, was a highly valuable metal alloy in classical antiquity. It is thought to be an alloy of copper with the addition of a small proportion of gold and silver (perhaps as little as 8% of each), mixed and treated to produce a material with a dark purplish patina, similar to the colour of liver. It is referred to in various ancient texts, but few known examples of hepatizon exist today.

Of the known types of bronze or brass in classical antiquity (known in Latin as aes and in Greek as χαλκός), hepatizon was the second most valuable. Pliny the Elder mentions it in his Natural History, stating that it is less valuable than Corinthian bronze, which contained a greater proportion of gold or silver and as a result resembled the precious metals, but was esteemed before bronze from Delos and Aegina.[1][2] As a result of its dark colour, it was particularly valued for statues.[3] According to Pliny, the method of making it, like that for Corinthian bronze, had been lost for a long time.

Similar alloys are found outside Europe. For example, shakudō is a Japanese billon of gold and copper with a characteristic dark blue-purple patina.

Other uses

The same term is part of the binomial species names of various living things:

Lichen

  • Cetraria hepatizon
  • Melanelia hepatizon
  • Lichen hepatizon
  • Parmelia hepatizon
  • Platysma hepatizon
  • Tuckermanopsis hepatizon

Snail

  • Rhysotina hepatizon
  • Thomeonanina hepatizon

See also

Metallurgy


鋁鎳鈷合金鋁合金Aluminium bronzeAluminium-lithium alloyArsenical bronzeArsenical copperBell metalBeryllium copperBillon (alloy)BirmabrightBismanol黃銅青铜Calamine brassChinese silverChromium hydride康銅氢化亚铜Copper–tungstenCorinthian bronzeCunife白铜Cymbal alloysDevarda's alloy杜拉鋁Dutch metal琥珀金Florentine bronzeGilding metal玻璃GlucydurGuanín (bronze)GunmetalHiduminiumHydronaliumItalma镁铝合金MegalliumMercuryMuntz metalNichromeOrmoluPhosphor bronzePinchbeck (alloy)塑料PlexiglasRose's metalSpeculum metal不鏽鋼Stellite钢结构Tombac維塔立合金伍德合金Y alloyManganinMelchior (alloy)Nickel silverMolybdochalkos北歐金ShakudōTumbagaAlGaGalfenolGalinstan白金 (合金)銠金礦Crown goldElinvarField's metalFernicoFerroalloyFerroceriumFerrochromeFerromanganeseFerromolybdenumFerrosiliconFerrotitaniumFerrouranium不變鋼铸铁Iron–hydrogen alloy生鐵Kanthal (alloy)KovarStaballoySpiegeleisenBulat steelCrucible steel41xx steel大馬士革鋼Mangalloy高速鋼Mushet steel马氏体时效钢High-strength low-alloy steelReynolds 531电工钢Spring steelAL-6XNCelestriumAlloy 20Marine grade stainless马氏体不锈钢Sanicro 28Surgical stainless steelZeron 100Silver steelTool steel耐候钢烏茲鋼銲料TerneType metalElektron (alloy)汞齊Magnox (alloy)AlumelBrightrayChromelHaynes International英高鎳合金MonelNicrosilNisilNickel titaniumΜ合金透磁合金超導磁率合金Nickel hydridePlutonium–gallium alloy钠钾合金MischmetalTerfenol-DPseudo palladiumScandium hydride釤鈷磁鐵Argentium sterling silverBritannia silverDoré bullionGoloidPlatinum sterlingShibuichiSterling silverTibetan silverTi Beta-C.Titanium alloy氢化钛Gum metalTitanium gold氮化钛巴氏合金Britannia metalPewterQueen's metalWhite metal氢化铀ZamakZirconium hydride甲烷Mezzanine原子

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0. There is a list of all authors in Wikipedia

Material Database

database,rohs,reach,compliancy,directory,listing,information,substance,material