Yes! Silver can react with other elements to form a compound
Copper and Silver are both elements. However the copper and silver objects you find in everyday life are unlikly to be 100% pure copper or silver. These objects will be made with copper or silver alloyed to other metals to improve its properties or decrease its cost.
Silver commonly combines with elements such as oxygen, sulfur, and chlorine to form silver oxide (Ag2O), silver sulfide (Ag2S), and silver chloride (AgCl), respectively. These compounds are often found in nature as minerals or are used in various industrial applications.
The elements in silver bromide are silver (Ag) and bromine (Br). Silver bromide is a chemical compound made of these two elements in a 1:1 ratio.
Silver can combine with elements like oxygen to form silver oxide (Ag2O), chlorine to form silver chloride (AgCl), sulfur to form silver sulfide (Ag2S), and more. These combinations can result in the formation of various silver compounds with different properties and uses.
Gold, silver, and copper belong to the class of minerals known as native elements. These minerals occur in nature in their pure form and are not chemically bound to other elements.
Silver is an element, there are no other elements in it.
Yes
Yes silver is quite reactive.
Yes, gold and silver are native elements, which means they can be found in their pure form in nature without being chemically combined with other elements.
Yes, many chemical compounds of silver are known.
For example halogens and sulfur reacts with silver.
It isn't.
Copper, Silver and Gold
Yes, silver can react with many other elements forming compounds: AgS, AgCl, AgI, AgBr etc.
today 1coines has 100 coines so we will uesed silver coines today was no valau
It barely reacts with other elements, just like gold. That is why it is considered a rare element.
No. Xenon is a noble gas, silver is not.