There is no reason at all why cobalt cannot be combined with more cobalt. It can. Cobalt is a metal. It can be recovered from ore and refined, then melted down with other cobalt pieces to form one large mass of the metal.
YES
Cobalt metal is found naturally only in chemically combined form. The element produced by reductive smelting, is a very hard, lustrous, silver-gray metal.
Cobalt (I) chloride = Cobalt monochloride = CoCl Cobalt (II) chloride = Cobalt dichloride = CoCl2 Cobalt (III) chloride = Cobalt trichloride = CoCl3
Cobalt is generally bivalent or trivalent. So either Cobalt (II) or Cobalt (III).
Cobalt originates from the German word Kobald or Kobalt, meaning two things. The first is "evil spirit" because the miners that first encountered it discovered that it was poisonous. The second theory is that it means "goblin" because the miners, who were silver miners, believed that this metal stole the silver.BOWLIN SHOES
Cobalt Chloride, Cobalt Nitrate
Yes. Cobalt forms many salts and some other compounds as well.
Cobalt react with oxygen, sulfur, fluorine, chlorine, carbon, nitrogen etc.
Cobalt metal is found naturally only in chemically combined form. The element produced by reductive smelting, is a very hard, lustrous, silver-gray metal.
The latest model of the Chevy Cobalt is the 2010. The sedan model gets 24 mpg in the city and 33 mpg on the highway with a combined mpg of 27. This is decent to good efficiency for a car.
Depends on the alloy. Steel is iron + carbon. Other metals can include nickel, chromium, vanadium, manganese, cobalt.
Yes, cobalt form many chemical compounds as cobalt nitrate, cobalt chloride, cobalt sulfate, cobalt sulfide, etc.
Yes, cobalt form many chemical compounds as cobalt nitrate, cobalt chloride, cobalt sulfate, cobalt sulfide, etc.
There are no compounds in Cobalt. It is completely impossible, because Cobalt is an element, and compounds are made up of elements. If this is what you meant to ask, then there a a lot of compounds with Cobalt in them. One example is Cobalt (III) Fluoride, chemical formula CoF3. Any compound with a "Co" (the "C" must be capitalized and the "o" must lowercase) in it contains Cobalt.
cobalt = Cobalt/Kobalt
Cobalt (I) chloride = Cobalt monochloride = CoCl Cobalt (II) chloride = Cobalt dichloride = CoCl2 Cobalt (III) chloride = Cobalt trichloride = CoCl3
Cobalt is generally bivalent or trivalent. So either Cobalt (II) or Cobalt (III).
Cobalt originates from the German word Kobald or Kobalt, meaning two things. The first is "evil spirit" because the miners that first encountered it discovered that it was poisonous. The second theory is that it means "goblin" because the miners, who were silver miners, believed that this metal stole the silver.BOWLIN SHOES