9.3

Extraction of metals

Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry (0620)  · Unit 9: Metals  · 8 flashcards

Extraction of metals is topic 9.3 in the Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry (0620) syllabus , positioned in Unit 9 — Metals , alongside Properties of metals, Reactivity series and Uses of metals.  In one line: An alloy is a mixture of a metal with other elements. These elements can be other metals or non-metals. Alloys are often harder and stronger than pure metals.

This topic is examined in Paper 1 (multiple-choice) and Papers 3/4 (theory), plus Paper 5 or Paper 6 (practical / alternative to practical).

The deck below contains 8 flashcards — 2 definitions, 3 key concepts and 3 identification cards — covering the precise wording mark schemes reward.  Use the 2 definition cards to lock down command-word answers (define, state), then move on to the concept and application cards to handle explain, describe and compare questions.

Key definition

An alloy

An alloy is a mixture of a metal with other elements. These elements can be other metals or non-metals. Alloys are often harder and stronger than pure metals.

What the Cambridge 0620 syllabus says

Official 2026-2028 spec

These are the exact learning objectives Cambridge sets for this topic. Match the command word (Describe, Explain, State, etc.) in your answer to score full marks.

  1. Describe Describe an alloy as a mixture of a metal with other elements, including: (a) brass as a mixture of copper and zinc (b) stainless steel as a mixture of iron and other elements such as chromium, nickel and carbon
  2. State State that alloys can be harder and stronger than the pure metals and are more useful
  3. Describe Describe the uses of alloys in terms of their physical properties, including stainless steel in cutlery because of its hardness and resistance to rusting
  4. Identify Identify representations of alloys from diagrams of structure
  5. Explain Explain in terms of structure how alloys can be harder and stronger than the pure metals because the different sized atoms in alloys mean the layers can no longer slide over each other Supplement
Definition Flip

What is an alloy?

Answer Flip

An alloy is a mixture of a metal with other elements. These elements can be other metals or non-metals. Alloys are often harder and stronger than pure metals.

Key Concept Flip

Give an example of an alloy containing copper, and its constituent element.

Answer Flip

Brass is an alloy made from copper and zinc. By mixing copper and zinc, you create a material more suitable for some applications than pure copper.

Key Concept Flip

Give an example of an alloy containing iron, and its constituent elements.

Answer Flip

Stainless steel is an alloy made from iron, chromium, nickel, and carbon. The addition of these elements makes it resistant to rusting.

Key Concept Flip

Why are alloys often more useful than pure metals?

Answer Flip

Alloys are often harder and stronger than the pure metals they are composed of. This makes them more suitable for certain applications.

Example: stainless steel is more suitable for cutlery due to its hardness and resistance to rusting.
Key Concept Flip

Explain why alloys are harder and stronger than pure metals in terms of their structure.

Answer Flip

Alloys have atoms of different sizes disrupting the regular arrangement of atoms. This means the layers of atoms can no longer easily slide over each other, making the alloy harder and stronger. The different sized atoms prevent easy movement.

Key Concept Flip

Explain the purpose of adding chromium to steel to make stainless steel.

Answer Flip

The chromium reacts with oxygen to form a thin layer of chromium oxide on the surface of the steel. This layer protects the iron from rusting (oxidation).

Key Concept Flip

Describe one specific use of stainless steel and explain why it is suitable for that use.

Answer Flip

Stainless steel is used in cutlery because of its hardness and resistance to rusting. The hardness means it can withstand repeated use, and resistance to rusting ensures it stays clean and hygienic.

Definition Flip

Name one property that alloys have over their pure metal counterparts

Answer Flip

Alloys are often stronger and harder than their pure metal counterparts. This makes them useful in a variety of different applications

Review the material

Read revision notes with definitions, equations, and exam tips.

Read Notes

Test yourself

Practice with MCQ questions to check your understanding.

Take Chemistry Quiz
9.2 Reactivity series 9.4 Uses of metals

Key Questions: Extraction of metals

What is an alloy?

An alloy is a mixture of a metal with other elements. These elements can be other metals or non-metals. Alloys are often harder and stronger than pure metals.

Name one property that alloys have over their pure metal counterparts

Alloys are often stronger and harder than their pure metal counterparts. This makes them useful in a variety of different applications

Tips to avoid common mistakes in Extraction of metals

More topics in Unit 9 — Metals

Extraction of metals sits alongside these Chemistry decks in the same syllabus unit. Each uses the same spaced-repetition system, so progress in one informs the next.

Cambridge syllabus keywords to use in your answers

These are the official Cambridge 0620 terms tagged to this section. Mark schemes credit responses that use the exact term — weave them into your answers verbatim rather than paraphrasing.

extraction ore reduction carbon blast furnace iron extraction haematite coke limestone slag electrolysis aluminium extraction bauxite recycling

Key terms covered in this Extraction of metals deck

Every term below is defined in the flashcards above. Use the list as a quick recall test before your exam — if you can't define one of these in your own words, flip back to that card.

Alloy
Name one property that alloys have over their pure metal counterparts

Related Chemistry guides

Long-read articles that go beyond the deck — cover the whole subject's common mistakes, high-yield content and revision pacing.

How to study this Extraction of metals deck

Start in Study Mode, attempt each card before flipping, then rate Hard, Okay or Easy. Cards you rate Hard come back within a day; cards you rate Easy push out to weeks. Your progress is saved in your browser, so come back daily for 5–10 minute reviews until every card reads Mastered.