Fluorine - toothpaste, cleaning detergents
Chlorine - salt, household bleach and tap water usually has a decent amount of chlorine
Bromine - Chocolate
Iodine - Iodine solution for wounds, most table salt contains iodine (not sea salt though)
All matter is made of elements. Most household products are compounds and mixtures. Common elements in these compounds are carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, chlorine, silicon, and a bunch of metals and alloys: aluminum, copper, iron, chromium, zinc, and nickel.
All household products have some combination of "elements". Some examples are: Common table salt (NaCl)- sodium and chlorine, some may also have magnesium and iodine Plant foods / fertilizers (N-P-K) - nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium, some have trace elements like boron and iron. Glassware (SiO2) - Silicon and Oxygen, may also contain trace elements like carbon, magnesium, calcium, etc. Copper, aluminum, iron - in some form or another in pots and pans Most cleaning chemicals, soaps, shampoos, liquid supplies have a good portion comprised of water (H2O). Vitamins and supplements - all sorts of elements there, iron, calcium, magnesium, boron, zinc, copper, selenium, chrominum, and more. Plastics / synthetics materials - polymers are primarily carbon and hydrogen, some have silicon and other elements as well. Lamps, bulbs - filaments can be made from tungsten, barium, strontium, calcium, and more. Some low-pressure variants are filled with halogen gas (usually made from iodine or bromine).
Water (H2O) - Hydrogen, Oxygen
Table salt (NaCl) - Sodium, Chorine
Steel wool (Fe) - Iron
Bleach (H2O2) - Hydrogen, Oxygen
Non-stick coating (C2F4)n - Carbon, Fluorine
Salt, coins, electrical cords, or any other electrical stuff really.
Everything, actually. The elements from the Periodic Table are all the elements we know of and everything is made from them.
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Aluminum-tin foil
Cadmium-battery
Calcium-milk
Carbon-bleach
Chlorine-salt
Copper-dime, penny(before1982)
Hydrogen-draino, water
Iodine-bleach, salt
Iron-nail
Magnesium-nickel
Manganese-nickel
Mercury-thermometer
Nickel- dime, battery
Oxygen-bleach, draino, water
Potassium-banana
Sodium-salt, bleach, draino
Zinc-penny(after 1982)
You're Welcome!! :D
Copper, it's in your electrical wiring.
Silicon, it's in your computer.
Gold and Silver, jewellery.
Chlorine, in your swimming pool (if you've got money that is :P)
Mercury, if you have an old thermometer, I believe they replaced the mercury in modern thermometers because it's so bloody poisonous.
The top three are proper examples, the other two are real but would require you to have both a pool and an old thermometer, so that's your call.
All the objects in the house, all the matter in the universe is formed from atoms of the elements contained in the periodic table.
Examples: iron, copper, carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, silicon, sodium.
tungsten in bulb filaments
these are interesting questions sir.
i like chicken nuggets
Any household items contain chlorophyll.
Any household items contain technetium.
Household items do not contain the highly radioactive element polonium.
it pens
lemon
Any household items contain chlorophyll.
Household items doesn't contain polonium.
Any household items contain technetium.
Household items do not contain the highly radioactive element polonium.
none.
disinfectants.
gravy
it pens
None. Trust me on this one. Francium is one of the most ephemeral of elements, and is a "laboratory curiosity" for the most part.
Bromothymol blue has no household uses.
Insecticide and disinfectants
Kitchen ware