Aluminium foil is made from pure aluminium; aluminium sulfide is Al2S3.
Actually there is. Aluminium is a really sturdy block that doesn't break nowhere near as easily as aluminium foil. Aluminium foil is used for cooking and breaks very easily. I'm pretty sure there are more differences but that's all I know. Hope this helped. If it didn't, I'm sorry.
No. Aluminum sulfate is a compound of aluminum, sulfur, and oxygen.
it is an element
aluminum
aluminum foil keeps things colder.
Both metal, aluminum foil right?
When someone uses the term tin foil, that person is almost always talking about aluminum foil. Tin foil is an old term, and it has carried into the present where it is frequently used to mean aluminum or kitchen foil. Bon appétit!
Aluminum is element. Aluminum foil is made entirely of aluminum.
Aluminum foil is made of Aluminum, which is an element. So yes Aluminum foil is a element
Actually there is. Aluminium is a really sturdy block that doesn't break nowhere near as easily as aluminium foil. Aluminium foil is used for cooking and breaks very easily. I'm pretty sure there are more differences but that's all I know. Hope this helped. If it didn't, I'm sorry.
No. Aluminum sulfate is a compound of aluminum, sulfur, and oxygen.
Tin foil... tin Aluminum foil... aluminum :)
Because all aluminum foil is not equal. Aluminum foil is available in a variety of thicknesses.
Only a single component makes up aluminum foil, which is the aluminum element. Hence, aluminum foil is considered as a pure substance.
Shut up....iron is an aluminum foil
it is an element
The density of the foils is the same. They are both pure aluminum, and they each have the same weight per unit volume (density). But the thicker "heavy duty" foil will weigh more for a given area of foil removed from a roll. This makes sense because the heavy duty foil is thicher, and something like, say, as square foot of this heavy duty foil will outweigh a square foot of "regular" foil.