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Bronze being a metal alloy, it would be held by metallic bonding.
Salt is an ionic compound consisting of a metal and a non metal.
It is mainly a non-metallic mixture which may have some metallic content.
No, aluminum is a metal.
The moving electrons maintain the metallic bonds regardless of how the staple is shaped. It will be bent without being broken.
NO. Al is not a metallic bond, Al is an element, the metal Aluminium. Being a metal it does display metallic bonding.
because magnets attracts any object that is metallic or has metal in them
Is to coat or cover electrolytically with a layer of metal. The process of producing a coating, usually metallic, on a surface by the action of electric current. The deposition of a metallic coating onto an object is achieved by putting a negative charge on the object to be coated and immersing it into a solution which contains a salt of the metal to be deposited.
It is a mixture - partially metallic and partially non-metallic
"Metallic" is not a metal. But elements that are metals, are metallic.
Bronze being a metal alloy, it would be held by metallic bonding.
Metal has a metallic luster and is a conductor.
Any metal is metallic, but I don't know the 'helix'
It would freeze as your tongue is wet, so when it freezes it will immediately stick to any freezing object, such as a metallic object.
Metallic bonds are maintained more or less instantaneously on mechanical deformation of a metal, unless the deformation is so severe that the piece of metal being deformed is broken. Since metallic bonding extends throughout a single piece of metal, it does not need to be "renewed" after deformation.
it is not metallic SO2 is a non-metallic compound
Titanium is a metal.