History of Aluminium

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History of aluminium

Aluminium or aluminum is a chemical element with symbol Al and atomic number 13. At standard conditions, aluminium forms
a bright silvery metal; this metal is unusually light and resistant against corrosion. Chemically, aluminium is a main-group
element that normally assumes the +3 oxidation state. Aluminium is the third most abundant element in the Earth's crust;[1] as
such, it is widespread in human-related activities. Aluminium is produced in tens of millions of metric tons; the metal is
commonly alloyed to improve some characteristics, such as hardness. Aluminium has no biological role but is not particularly
toxic.[2]

The aluminium compound alum has been known since the 5th century BCE and was extensively used by ancients for dyeing and
city defense; during the Middle Ages, the former use made alum a subject of international commerce. Scientists of the
Renaissance believed alum was a salt of a new earth; during the Age of Enlightenment, it was established that the earth was an
oxide of a new metal. Discovery of this metal was announced in 1825 by Danish physicist Hans Christian Ørsted, whose work
was extended by German chemist Friedrich Wöhler. Extrusion billets of aluminium

Aluminium was difficult to refine and thus uncommon in actual usage. Soon after its discovery, the price of aluminium exceeded
that of gold and was only reduced after the initiation of the first industrial production by French chemist Henri Étienne Sainte-Claire Deville in 1856. Aluminium became
much more available to the general public with the Hall–Héroult process independently developed by French engineer Paul Héroult and American engineer Charles Martin
Hall in 1886 and the Bayer process developed by Austrian chemist Carl Joseph Bayer in 1889. These processes have been used for aluminium production up to the present.

Introduction of these methods to mass production of aluminium led to the extensive use of the metal in industry and everyday lives. Aluminium has been used in aviation,
engineering, construction, and packaging thanks to its lightness and resistance against corrosion. Its production grew exponentially in the 20th century and it became an
exchange commodity in the 1970s. In 1900, production was 6,800 metric tons; in 2015, it was 57,500,000 tons.

Contents
Early history
Establishing the nature of alum
Synthesis of metal
Rare metal
Electrolytic production
Mass usage
Exchange commodity
See also
Notes
References
Bibliography

Early history
The history of aluminium was shaped by the usage of its compound alum. The first written record of alum was made in the 5th
century BCE by Greek historian Herodotus.[3] The ancients used alum as a dyeing mordant, in medicine, as a fire-resistant coating for
wood, and in chemical milling.[4] Aluminium metal was unknown. Roman writer Petronius mentioned in his novel Satiricon that an
unusual glass had been presented to the emperor: after it was thrown on the pavement, it did not break but only deformed and it was
brought to the former shape with a hammer. After learning from the inventor that nobody else knew how to produce this material,
the emperor had the inventor executed so that it does not diminish the price of gold.[5] Variations of this story were briefly mentioned
in Natural History by Roman historian Pliny the Elder (who noted the story had "been current through frequent repetition rather
than authentic")[6] and Roman History by Roman historian Cassius Dio.[5] Some sources suggest this glass could be aluminium.[a][b]
It is possible that aluminium-containing alloys were produced in China during the reign of the first Jin dynasty (265–420).[c]

Crystals of alum, the naturally After the Crusades, alum was a subject of international commerce;[10] it was indispensable in the European fabric industry.[11] Small
occurring form of which was alum mines were worked in Catholic Europe but most alum came from the Middle East.[12] Alum continued to be traded through the
known back to the ancients Mediterranean Sea until the mid-15th century, when the Ottomans greatly raised export taxes. In 1460, Giovanni da Castro, godson
of the Pope Pius II, discovered a rich source of alum at Tolfa near Rome and reported excitedly to his godfather, "today I bring you
victory over the Turk".[d] This newly found alum long played an important role in European pharmacy but the high prices set by the
papal government eventually made other states start their own production; large-scale alum mining came to other regions of Europe in the 16th century.[14]

Establishing the nature of alum


At the start of the Renaissance, the nature of alum remained unknown. Around 1530, Swiss physician Paracelsus recognized alum as separate from vitriole (sulfates) and
suggested that it was a salt of an earth.[15] In 1595, German doctor and chemist Andreas Libavius demonstrated alum and green and
blue vitriole were formed by the same acid but different earths;[16] for the undiscovered earth that formed alum, he proposed the
name "alumina".[15] In 1702, German chemist Georg Ernst Stahl stated the unknown base of alum was akin to lime or chalk; this
mistaken view was shared by many scientists for half a century.[17] In 1722, German chemist Friedrich Hoffmann suggested the base
of alum was a distinct earth.[17] In 1728, French chemist Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire claimed alum was formed by an unknown
earth and sulfuric acid;[17] he mistakenly believed burning of that earth yielded silica.[18] In 1739, French chemist Jean Gello proved
the earth in clay and the earth resulting from the reaction of an alkali on alum were identical.[19] In 1746, German chemist Johann
Heinrich Pott showed the precipitate obtained from pouring an alkali into a solution of alum was different from lime and chalk.[20]

In 1754, German chemist Andreas Sigismund Marggraf synthesized the earth of alum by boiling clay in sulfuric acid and adding
potash.[17] He realized that adding soda, potash, or an alkali to a solution of the new earth in sulfuric acid yielded alum.[21] He
described the earth as alkaline, as he had discovered it dissolved in acids when dried. Marggraf also described salts of this earth: the
chloride, the nitrate, and the acetate.[19] In 1758, French chemist Pierre Macquer wrote that alumina[e] resembled a metallic earth.[22]
In 1767, Swedish chemist Torbern Bergman synthesized alum by boiling alunite in sulfuric acid and adding potash to the solution. He
also synthesized alum as a reaction product between sulfates of potassium and earth of alum, demonstrating that alum was a double Antoine Lavoisier established
salt.[15] In 1776, German pharmaceutical chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele demonstrated that both alum and silica originated from clay that alumina was an oxide of
and alum did not contain silicon.[23] Geoffroy's mistake was only corrected in 1785 by German chemist and pharmacist Johann an unknown metal.
Christian Wiegleb who determined the earth of alum could not be synthesized from silica and alkalis, contrary to contemporary
belief.[24]

Swedish chemist Jöns Jacob Berzelius suggested in 1815[25] the formula AlO3 for alumina.[26] The correct formula, Al2O3, was established by German chemist Eilhard
Mitscherlich in 1821; this helped Berzelius determine the correct atomic weight of the metal, 27.[26]

Synthesis of metal
In 1760, French chemist Theodor Baron de Henouville suggested alumina was a metallic earth and attempted to reduce it to its metal,
but with no success. He claimed he had tried every method of reduction known at the time, though his methods were not published. It is
probable that he mixed alum with carbon or some organic substance, with salt or soda for flux, and heated it in a charcoal fire.[22] In
1782, French chemist Antoine Lavoisier wrote he considered alumina was an oxide of a metal with an affinity for oxygen so strong that
no known reducing agents could overcome it.[27]

In 1790, Austrian chemists Anton Leopold Ruprecht and Matteo Tondi repeated Baron's experiments, significantly increasing the
temperatures. They found small metallic particles they believed were the sought-after metal; but later experiments by other chemists
showed these were iron phosphide from impurities in charcoal and bone ash. German chemist Martin Heinrich Klaproth commented in
an aftermath, "if there exists an earth which has been put in conditions where its metallic nature should be disclosed, if it had such, an
earth exposed to experiments suitable for reducing it, tested in the hottest fires by all sorts of methods, on a large as well as on a small
scale, that earth is certainly alumina, yet no one has yet perceived its metallization."[28] Lavoisier in 1794[29] and French chemist Louis-
Bernard Guyton de Morveau in 1795 melted alumina to a white enamel in a charcoal fire fed by pure oxygen but found no metal.[29]
Hans Christian Ørsted, American chemist Robert Hare in 1802 melted alumina with an oxyhydrogen blowpipe, also obtaining the enamel, but still found no
discoverer of aluminium metal.[28]
metal
In 1807, British chemist Humphry Davy successfully electrolyzed alumina with alkaline batteries, but the resulting alloy contained
potassium and sodium, and Davy had no means to separate the desired metal from these. He then heated alumina with potassium,
forming potassium oxide, but was unable to produce the sought-after metal.[28] In 1808, Davy set up a different experiment on electrolysis of alumina, establishing that
alumina decomposed in the electric arc, but formed metal alloyed with iron and he was unable to separate the two.[30] Finally he tried yet another electrolysis experiment,
seeking to collect the metal on iron, but was again unable to separate the coveted metal from it.[28] Davy suggested the metal be named alumium in 1808[31] and aluminum
in 1812, thus producing the modern name.[30] Other scientists used the spelling aluminium; the former spelling regained usage in the United States in the following
decades.[32]

In 1813, American chemist Benjamin Silliman repeated Hare's experiment and obtained small granules of the sought-after metal, which almost immediately burned.[28]

In 1824, Danish physicist and chemist Hans Christian Ørsted attempted the production of the metal. He reacted anhydrous
aluminium chloride with potassium amalgam, yielding a lump of metal that looked similar to tin.[33][34] He presented his results and
demonstrated a sample of the new metal in 1825. In 1826, he wrote, "aluminium has a metallic luster and somewhat grayish color
and breaks down water very slowly"; this suggests that he had obtained an aluminium–potassium alloy rather than pure
aluminium.[35] Ørsted gave little importance to his discovery.[36] He did not notify either Davy or Berzelius, both of whom he knew,
and published his work in a Danish magazine unknown to the general European public.[36] As a result, he is often not credited as the
discoverer of the element;[37] some earlier sources went further and claimed Ørsted had not isolated aluminium.[38]

Berzelius tried to isolate the metal in 1825 by carefully washing the potassium analog of the base salt in cryolite in a crucible. Prior to
the experiment, he had correctly identified the formula of this salt as K3AlF6. He found no metal, but his experiment came very close
to succeeding and was successfully reproduced many times later. Berzelius's mistake was in using an excess of potassium, which
made the solution too alkaline; the alkaline solution dissolved all the newly formed aluminium.[39] Friedrich Wöhler, pioneer
researcher of the properties of
In 1827, German chemist Friedrich Wöhler visited Ørsted and received explicit permission to continue the aluminium research, aluminium
which Ørsted "did not have time" for.[36] Wöhler repeated Ørsted's experiments but did not identify any aluminium. (Wöhler later
wrote to Berzelius, "what Oersted assumed to be a lump of aluminium was certainly nothing but aluminium-containing
potassium".)[40] He conducted a similar experiment, mixing anhydrous aluminium chloride with potassium, and produced a powder of aluminium.[34] (After hearing about
this, Ørsted suggested his own aluminium may have contained potassium.)[36] Wöhler continued his research and in 1845 was able to produce small pieces of the metal and
described some of its physical properties. Wöhler's description of the properties indicates that he had obtained impure aluminium.[41] Other scientists also failed to
reproduce Ørsted's experiment,[41] and Wöhler was credited as the discoverer.[42] While Ørsted was not concerned with the priority of the discovery, some Danes tried to
demonstrate he had obtained aluminium,[36] and in 1921, the reason for the inconsistency between Ørsted's and Wöhler's experiments was discovered by Danish chemist
Johan Fogh, who demonstrated that Ørsted's experiment was successful thanks to use of a large amount of excess aluminium chloride and an amalgam with low potassium
content.[41] In 1936, scientists from American aluminium producing company Alcoa successfully recreated that experiment.[43] However, many later sources still referred to
Wöhler as the discoverer.[44]

Rare metal
Since Wöhler's method could not yield large amounts of aluminium, the metal remained uncommon; its cost had exceeded that
of gold before a new method was devised.[46] In 1852, aluminium cost US$545 per pound.[47]

French chemist Henri Étienne Sainte-Claire Deville announced an industrial method of aluminium production in 1854 at the
Paris Academy of Sciences.[48] Aluminium chloride could be reduced by sodium, a metal more convenient and less expensive
than potassium used by Wöhler.[49] Deville was able to produce an ingot of the metal.[50] Deville's research, which cost about 20
times the annual income of an ordinary family, was subsidized by Napoleon III of France.[51] While the metal was still not
displayed to the public, Napoleon is reputed to have held a banquet where the most honored guests were given aluminium
utensils while others made do with gold.[46]
The 2.85-kilogram (101 oz)
capstone of the Washington Bars of aluminium were subsequently exhibited for the first time to the general public at the Exposition Universelle of 1855.[52]
Monument (Washington, D.C.) was
The metal was presented as "the silver from clay", and this name was soon widely used.[53] It caught wide attention, including
made from aluminium in 1884. At
that of the avantgarde writers of the time—Charles Dickens, Nikolay Chernyshevsky, and Jules Verne—and the fair led to
the time, it was the largest piece of
aluminium ever cast.[45] eventual commercialization of the metal.[54] The price of aluminium fell to US$115 per pound in 1855 and to $17 per pound in
1859.[47] At the next fair in Paris in 1867, the visitors were presented with aluminium wire and foil.[55]

Manufacturers did not wish to devote resources from producing well-known metals, such as iron and bronze, to
experiment with a new one; moreover, produced aluminium was still not of great purity and differed in properties by
sample. This led to the initial general reluctance to produce the new metal.[51] The world's first industrial production of
aluminium was established at a smelter in Rouen in 1856 by Deville and partners.[48] Deville's smelter moved that year to
La Glacière and then Nanterre, and in 1857 to Salindres. The smelter was subsequently acquired by the French company
Pechiney and the Compagnie d'Alais et de la Camargue, which later became world's largest in chemical production of
aluminium. The factory's technology continued to improve, and the output grew from 2 kilograms in Nanterre to 1,800
kilograms in Salindres in 1872.[53] The factory in Salindres used bauxite as the primary aluminium ore;[57] some chemists,
including Deville, sought to use cryolite, but with little success.[58] British engineer William Gerhard set up a plant with
Statue of Anteros, Greek god of requited
cryolite as the primary raw material in Battersea, London, in 1856, but technical and financial difficulties forced the closure
love, on Piccadilly Circus in London. This
of the plant in three years.[59] statue was cast in 1892 using Deville's
techniques: the electrolytic production
Other chemists also sought to industrialize production of aluminium. British ironmaster Isaac Lowthian Bell produced
had been invented by that time but not
aluminium from 1860 to 1874. During the opening of his factory, he waved to the crowd with a unique and costly yet fully commercialized.[56]
aluminium top hat.[60] British engineer James Fern Webster launched the industrial production of aluminium by reduction
with sodium in 1882; his aluminium was much purer than Deville's. Several other production sites were set up in the
1880s.[61] World production of aluminium in 1869 equaled 2 metric tons; in 1884, it was 4 tons.[62] In 1886, American engineer Alexander Castner devised a method of
cheaper production of sodium, which decreased the price of aluminium to $8 per pound, but he did not have enough capital to construct a large factory like Deville's.
Deville continued to improve his production method and it remained dominant until the late 1890s, when the much cheaper electrolytic production was fully
commercialized; Deville was unable to reduce the price from $15 per pound, while electrolytic aluminium cost $0.54 per pound in 1897.[56]

Electrolytic production
Aluminium was first synthesized electrolytically in 1854 independently by the German chemist Robert Wilhelm Bunsen and Deville. Their electrolysis methods did not
become the basis for industrial production of aluminium because electrical supplies were inefficient at the time; this only changed with the invention of the dynamo by
Belgian engineer Zénobe-Théophile Gramme in 1870 and the three-phase current by Russian engineer Mikhail Dolivo-Dobrovolsky in 1889.[64] Soon after the discovery,
Bunsen moved on to other areas of interest while Deville's work was noticed by Napoleon III; this was the reason why Deville's Napoleon-funded research on aluminium
production had been started. Deville quickly realized electrolytic production was impractical at the time and moved on to the chemical methods.[65]

The first large-scale production method was independently developed by French engineer Paul Héroult and American engineer Charles Martin Hall in 1886; it is now
known as the Hall–Héroult process. Electrolysis of pure alumina is impractical given its very high melting point; both Héroult and Hall realized its melting point could be
significantly lowered by presence of molten cryolite. Héroult could not find enough interest in his invention as demand for aluminium was still small and Deville's factory
in Salindres did not wish to improve their process. In 1888, Héroult and his companions founded Aluminium Industrie Aktien Gesellschaft and started industrial
production of aluminium bronze in Neuhausen am Rheinfall. This production was only active for a year, but during that time, Société électrométallurgique française was
founded in Paris. The society purchased Héroult's patents and appointed him as the director of a smelter in Isère, which would produce aluminium bronze on a large scale
at first and pure aluminium in a few months.[66][67]

At the same time, Hall produced aluminium by the same process in his home at Oberlin[68] and successfully tested it at the smelter in Lockport. He then sought to employ it
for a large-scale production. The smelter owners did not wish to change their production methods because they feared a mass production of aluminium would immediately
drop the price of the metal. The president of the company considered purchasing Hall's patent to ensure that the competitors
would not make use of it. Hall founded the Pittsburgh Reduction Company in 1888 and initiated production of aluminium. In
the coming years, this technology was improved and new factories were constructed.[69]

The Hall–Héroult process converts alumina into the metal; Austrian chemist Carl Joseph Bayer discovered a way of purifying
bauxite to yield alumina in 1889, now known as the Bayer process. Bayer sintered bauxite with alkali and leached it with water;
after stirring the solution and introducing a seeding agent to it, he found a precipitate of pure aluminium hydroxide, which
decomposed to alumina on heating. In a few years, he discovered that the aluminium contents of bauxite dissolved in the
alkaline leftover from isolation of alumina solids; this was crucial for the industrial employment of this method.[70]

Modern production of the aluminium metal is based around the Bayer and Hall–Héroult processes. The Hall–Héroult process
was further improved in 1920 by a team led by Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Söderberg. Previously, anode cells had been made
from pre-baked coal blocks, which quickly corrupted and required replacement; the team introduced continuous electrodes
made from a coke and tar paste in a reduction chamber. This greatly increased the world output of aluminium.[71]

Cover of the patent granted to


Charles Martin Hall for his process
Mass usage
of reducing aluminium by
electrolysis. Hall filed the patent two Give me 30,000 tonnes of aluminium, and I will win the war.
months after Héroult filed his; as a
result, it took him almost three years — Soviet leader Joseph Stalin in writing to U.S. president Franklin Roosevelt in 1941[72]
to prove the originality of his method
and the patent was only granted in The prices for aluminium declined, and by the early 1890s, the metal had
1889.[63] become widely used in jewelry, eyeglass frames, optical instruments, and many
everyday items. Aluminium tableware began to be produced in the late 19th
century and gradually supplanted copper and cast iron tableware in the first
decades of the 20th century. Aluminium foil was popularized at that time. Aluminium is soft and light, but it was soon
discovered that alloying it with other metals could increase its hardness while preserving low density. Aluminium alloys
found many uses in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. For instance, aluminium bronze is applied to make flexible German aluminium 50 pfennig coin, 1920
bands, sheets, and wire, and is widely employed in the shipbuilding and aviation industries.[73] Aviation used a new
aluminium alloy, duralumin, invented in 1903.[74] Aluminium recycling started in the early 1900s and has been used
extensively since[75] as aluminium is not impaired by recycling and thus can be recycled repeatedly.[76] At this point, only the metal that had not been used by end-
consumers was recycled.[77] During World War I, major governments demanded large shipments of aluminium for light strong airframes. They often subsidized factories
and the necessary electrical supply systems.[78][79] Overall production of aluminium peaked during the war: world production of aluminium in 1900 was 6,800 metric tons;
in 1916, annual production exceeded 100,000 tons.[77] The war created a greater demand for aluminium, which the growing primary production was unable to fully satisfy,
and recycling grew intensely as well.[75] The peak in production was followed by a decline, then a swift growth.[77]

During the first half of the 20th century, the real price for aluminium continuously fell from $14,000 per metric ton in 1900 to $2,340 in 1948 (in 1998 United States
dollars) with some exceptions such as the sharp price rise during World War I.[77] Aluminium was plentiful and in 1919, Germany began to replace its silver coins with
aluminium ones; more and more denominations were switched to aluminium coins as hyperinflation progressed in the country.[80] By the mid-20th century, aluminium
had become a part of everyday lives, becoming an essential component of houseware.[81] Aluminium freight cars first appeared in 1931. Their lower mass allowed them to
carry more cargo.[79] During the 1930s, aluminium emerged as a civil engineering material, being used in both basic construction and building interiors,[82] and advanced
its use in military engineering for both airplanes and tank engines.[72]

Aluminium obtained from recycling was considered inferior to primary aluminium because of poorer chemistry control as well
as poor removal of dross and slags. Recycling grew overall but largely depended on the output of primary production: for
instance, as electric energy prices went down in the United States in the late 1930s, more primary aluminium could be produced
in the energy-expensive Hall–Héroult process, rendering recycling less needed, and thus aluminium recycling rates went
down.[75] By 1940, mass recycling of post-consumer aluminium had begun.[77]

During World War II, production peaked again, first exceeding 1,000,000 metric tons in 1941.[77] Aluminium was heavily used
in aircraft production and thus a strategic material of extreme importance; so much so that when Alcoa (successor of Hall's
Pittsburgh Reduction Company and the aluminium production monopolist in the United States at the time) did not expand its
During World War II, the British production, U.S. Secretary of Interior proclaimed in 1941, "If America loses the war, it can thank the Aluminum Corporation of
collected aluminium utensils from America".[84] In 1939, Germany was world's leading producer of aluminium; the Germans thus saw aluminium as their edge in
households. The aluminium was the war. Aluminium coins continued to be used but while they symbolized decline on introduction, by 1939, they had come to
made into aircraft.[83] represent power.[85] (In 1941, they began to be withdrawn from circulation.)[86] After the United Kingdom was attacked in 1940,
it started an ambitious program of aluminium recycling; the newly appointed Minister of Aircraft Production appealed to the
public to donate any household aluminium for airplane building.[83] The Soviet Union received 328,100 metric tons of
aluminium from its co-combatants from 1941 to 1945;[87] this aluminium would be used in aircraft and tank engines.[88] Without these shipments, the output of the Soviet
aircraft industry would have fallen by over a half.[89] Production fell after the war but then rose again.[77]

Exchange commodity
Earth's first artificial satellite, launched in 1957, consisted of two joined aluminium hemispheres, and almost all subsequent spacecraft have been made of aluminium.[71]
The aluminium can was first manufactured in 1956 and employed as a container for drinks in 1958.[90] In the 1960s, aluminium was employed for production of wires and
cables.[91] Since the 1970s, high-speed trains have commonly used aluminium for its lightness. For the same reason, the aluminium content of cars is growing.[79]
By 1955, the world market had been mostly divided by the Six Majors: Alcoa, Alcan (originated as a part of Alcoa), Reynolds,
Kaiser, Pechiney (successor of Pechiney and the Compagnie d'Alais et de la Camargue that bought Deville's smelter), and
Alusuisse (successor of Héroult's Aluminium Industrie Aktien Gesellschaft); their combined share of the market equaled 86%.
From 1945, aluminium consumption grew by almost 10% each year for nearly three decades, gaining ground in building
applications, electric cables, basic foils, and the aircraft industry. In the early 1970s, an additional boost came from the
development of aluminium beverage cans.[92] The real price declined until the early 1970s;[93] in 1973, the real price equaled
$2,130 (in 1998 United States dollars).[77] The main drivers of the decline of prices were the decline of extraction and processing
costs over technological progress as well as the growth of aluminium production,[93] which first exceeded 10,000,000 metric
Aluminium can
tons in 1971.[77]

In the late 1960s, governments became aware of waste from the industrial
production; they enforced a series of regulations favoring recycling and waste disposal. Söderberg anodes, which save capital
and labor to bake the anodes but are more harmful to the environment (because of a greater difficulty in collecting and
disposing of the baking fumes),[94] fell in disfavor, and production began to shift back to the pre-baked anodes.[95] The
aluminium industry started to promote recycling of aluminium cans in an attempt to avoid restrictions on them.[75] This
sparked recycling of aluminium previously used by end-consumers: for example, in the United States, levels of recycling of such
aluminium increased 3.5 times from 1970 to 1980 and 7.5 times to 1990.[77] Production costs for primary aluminium grew in the
1970s and 1980s, and this also contributed to the rise of aluminium recycling.[75]
Formwork at the Volokolamskaya
metro station of the Moscow Metro In the 1970s, the increased demand for aluminium made it an exchange commodity; it entered the London Metal Exchange,
world's oldest industrial metal exchange, in 1978.[71] Since then, aluminium has been traded for United States dollars and its
price fluctuated along with the exchange rates of the currency.[96] The need to exploit lower-grade poorer quality deposits and
the use of fast increasing input costs (above all, energy, but also bauxite) as well as changes in exchange rates and greenhouse gas regulation increased the net cost of
aluminium;[93] the real price grew in the 1970s.[97]

The increase of the real price and changes of tariffs and taxes started redistribution of the world producers' shares:
the United States, the Soviet Union, and Japan accounted for nearly 60% of world's primary production in 1972
(and their combined share of consumption of primary aluminium was also close to 60%),[98] but their combined
share only slightly exceeded 10% in 2012.[99] The production shift started in the 1970s; production started to move
from the United States, Japan, and Western Europe to Australia, Canada, the Middle East, Russia, and China, where
it was cheaper due to lower electricity prices and favorable regulation from states, such as low taxes or subsidies.[100]
Production costs in the 1980s and 1990s declined because of advances in technology, lower energy and alumina
prices, and high exchange rates of the United States dollar.[101]

In the 2000s, the BRIC countries' combined share grew from 32.6% to 56.5% in primary production and 21.4% to
47.8% in primary consumption.[102] China has accumulated an especially large share of world production, thanks to
abundance of resources, cheap energy, and governmental stimuli;[103] it also increased its share of consumption
from 2% in 1972 to 40% in 2010.[104] The only other country with a two-digit percentage was the United States with
World production of aluminium since 1900
11%; no other country exceeded 5%.[105] In the United States, Western Europe, and Japan, most aluminium was
consumed in transportation, engineering, construction, and packaging.[105]

In the mid-2000s, increasing energy, alumina, and carbon (used in anodes) prices caused an increase in production costs. This was amplified by a shift in currency
exchange rates: not only a weakening of the United States dollar, but also a strengthening of the Chinese yuan. The latter became important as most Chinese aluminium
was relatively cheap.[106]

The world output continued to grow: in 2013, annual production of aluminium exceeded 50,000,000 metric tons. In 2015, it was a record 57,500,000 tons.[77] Its real price
(in 1998 United States dollars) in 2015 was $1,340 per metric ton ($1,940 per ton in contemporary dollars).[77]

See also
History of fluorine
List of countries by primary aluminium production

Notes
a. Deville had established that heating a mixture of sodium chloride, clay, and charcoal yields numerous aluminium globules. This was published in the Proceedings of
the Academy of Sciences but eventually forgotten.[5] French chemist André Duboin discovered that heating a mixture of borax, alumina, and smaller quantities of
dichromate and silica in a crucible formed impure aluminium. Boric acid is abundant in Italy. According to Duboin, this hints at the possibility that boric acid, potash,
and clay under the reducing influence of coal may have produced aluminium in Rome.[5]
b. A similar story is attributed to Pliny, which instead mentions a light bright metal extracted from clay—a description that matches that of aluminium. Both Petronius and
Pliny, however, mentioned glass[7] (and Dio did not mention the material at all).[8] A possible source of the error is French general Louis Gaspard Gustave Adolphe
Yvelin de Béville, who was openly cited by Deville in 1864. De Béville searched in the Roman sources for possible ancient mentions of the new metal and discovered
among others the story in Satiricon. De Béville might have misinterpreted Petronius's expression aurum pro luto habere (literally "to have gold as dirt"), assuming that
lutum stands for "clay" (a possible translation), whereas the word throughout the book actually means something valueless in general. German chemist Gerhard
Eggert concluded that this story is erroneous.[7] After evaluating other possible explanations, he announced the original story was also probably made up; however, he
did not evaluate Duboin's suggestion.[7]
c. Alumina was plentiful and could be reduced by coke in the presence of copper, giving aluminium–copper alloys. Existing works by the Chinese alchemists show that if
anywhere at the time, alloys with a small content of aluminium could be produced in China. The Chinese did not have the technology to produce pure aluminium and
the temperatures needed (around 2000 °C) were not achievable. A number of high-aluminium artifacts were found in China relating to the times of the first Jin dynasty
but it was later shown the technology needed to make them was not achievable at the time and thus the artifacts were not authentic.[9]
d. "Today, I bring you the victory over the Turk. Every year they wring from the Christians more than three hundred thousand ducats for the alum with which we dye wool.
For this is not found among the Latins except a very small quantity. [...] But I have found seven mountains so rich in this material that they could supply seven worlds.
If you will give orders to engage workmen, build furnaces, and smelt the ore, you will provide all Europe with alum and the Turk will lose all his profits. Instead they will
accrue to you..."[13]
e. The terms "earth of alum" and "alumina" refer to the same substance. German-speaking authors mentioned in this section used "earth of alum" (Alaun-Erde), while
French authors used "alumina" (alumine).

References
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