metals
there r more metals
There are more metals than nonmetals on the periodic table. There are 18 nonmetals, compared to 117 known elements.
yes
Non-metals and metalloids are found to the right on the periodic table.
The periodic table comprises of metals (on the left) ,non-metals(on the right ) and transition elements (between metals and non-metals) in the periodic table.
there are more metals than non-metals on the periodic table
No it is the other way around. The majority of elements in the periodic table are metals.
Yes, 3 or 4 times as many elements are metallic. Note, the whole left AND bottom portions of the Periodic Table are metals.
in periodic table metals are present on left and non metals are present on the right ...
The metalloids split the table these are a diagonal group of elements, B, Si, Ge, As, Sb and Te. To their right are the non metals to the left the metals. There are many more metals than any other type of element. See Wikipedia article "Periodic table (metals and non metals)"
There are more metals than non-metals. This occurs because of the transition metals group. When looking at a group on the periodic table the transition metals makes up a large portion because they are the atoms that take use of the the d orbital for electrons. The d orbital has room for 10 electrons and therefore there is a large number of transition metals per group.
No, all elements on the periodic table cannot be classified as metals or non-metals. The periodic table includes metals, non-metals, and metalloids, which have properties of both metals and non-metals. Elements are classified based on their physical and chemical properties, such as conductivity, reactivity, and appearance.