No, titanium is not tin. Titanium (chemical symbol Ti) and tin (chemical symbol Sb) are both chemical elements. They are unique. They have different physical and chemical properties, and links are found below that you can follow to investigate the two substances.
No Tin is an element. Tin foil is a misnomer and British expression. Cooking foil is almost always pure aluminium.
No, tin and aluminum are two different metals.
Products made of aluminum are often referred to as tin (e.g. aluminum foil -> tin foil) but this is a misnomer.
No, they are entirely different metals.
Formula: TiN, not to be confused with Tin(Stannum)
No Titanium is very light. Glasses and lamps are made out of Titanium and thus it is not very heavy.
Titanium. (Tin is Sn.)
This is not a serious chemical question, but the desired answer is probably tin, because the name of the element is a combination of the symbols for titanium and nitrogen: TiN. This does not mean that tin can actually be made from titanium and nitrogen!
Titanium is located in period 4 on the periodic table
Formula: TiN, not to be confused with Tin(Stannum)
Formula: TiN
No Titanium is very light. Glasses and lamps are made out of Titanium and thus it is not very heavy.
Titanium. (Tin is Sn.)
Copper, titanium, 😎
This is not a serious chemical question, but the desired answer is probably tin, because the name of the element is a combination of the symbols for titanium and nitrogen: TiN. This does not mean that tin can actually be made from titanium and nitrogen!
Titanium is located in period 4 on the periodic table
Titanium burns (chemically reacts) in nitrogen to form titanium nitride. As a chemical reaction, the substance is a compound, not an element.
The ore is cassiterite, the only commercially important source of tin.
Titanium,Zircon, Monazite, tin, iron ore,and salt
They are niobium-titanium or niobium-tin intermetallic compounds.
Titanium, zirconium, hafnium and rutherfordium make up group 4.