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Antimony is mainly obtained from the sulphide ore stibnite by :

(1) Concentration and liquation to produce the so-called crude antimony which is, in fact, crude sulphide proper to heading 26.17.

(2) Smelting to produce impure antimony known as singles (regulus).

(3) Further smelting to produce star bowls which, after refining, give the purest forms, star antimony or French metal .
Antimony is a lustrous white metal with a bluish tinge, brittle and easily powdered.
It has very few uses in the unalloyed form. It is however alloyed, especially with lead and tin, to harden them, to produce bearing alloys, printers type and other casting alloys, pewter, Britannia metal, etc. (see Chapters 78 and 80, where these alloys normally fall because of the predominance of lead or tin).

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