Nope. Only those surrounding the staircase line in the periodic table are metalliods. Boron(B), Silicon(S), Germanium(Ge), Arsenic(As), Antimony(Sb), Tellurium(Te) are metalloids. Aluminum(Al) and Polonium(Po) are metals. The others are non-metals.
NO. Many of them have properties of metals and nonmetals and are considered "semimetallic".
Groups 13-15 are a combination of nonmetals and metalliods
Yes they are.
They're called the transition metals, and many of them have multiple valence states.
Even though 3 does not seem like a transition metal, elements 3-12 are all transition metals.
All the elements in group 6 are called the transition metals. This is also true for groups 3-12.
all transition elements are metals
The transition elements are found all in the middle, but don't include Lanthanum and Actinium together with it. Because those two are all from the Rare Earth Elements section.Here is the link with a picture of it. Should be able to give you a clear open of mind about periodic table.http://www.modelscience.com/PeriodicTable.html
They're called the transition metals, and many of them have multiple valence states.
All the elements in the d block are metals. Elements in the groups 1 and 2 are also metals. The p block contains metals, non metals and metalloids.
Even though 3 does not seem like a transition metal, elements 3-12 are all transition metals.
No, they are only metals towards the bottom and left. Metals are found at the bottom of the groups, non metals at the top and some of the middle ones are metalloids.
They lose electrons, not elements. These are metals. Group I metals (IA or alkali metals), Group 2 metals (IIA or alkaline earth metals), transition metals (groups 3 thru 12), and all other metals.
all the transition elements are in groups 3-12
All elements are metals.
All elements in the groups (excluding transition metals) have the same number of electrons as the group number.
They are called Transition Elements are they are all made up of metals.
All metals except alloys of metals are elements, but not all elements are metals.
All pure metals are chemical elements; alloys are not elements.
All metals are elements.