No. A metal oxide can be thought of as the product of burning a metal. In essence it has already burned.
When metals burn in oxygen, they form metal oxides. For example, when iron burns in oxygen, it forms iron oxide (rust). The specific metal oxide formed depends on the metal and the conditions of the reaction.
Yes, at a high enough temperature Copper will burn and combine with Oxygen to form Copper oxide.
Calcium is a metal, therefore this is a metal oxide.
The oxide of a metal is called a metal oxide. It is a compound formed by a metal and oxygen atoms.
Phosphorus is not an oxide. It is an element. It is a nonmetal.
Metal oxide + Water --> Metal hydroxide
B2O3 is a non-metal oxide, as it is composed of the non-metal element boron and oxygen.
metallic oxide
The oxidation of a metal produces a metal oxide. For example, calcium + oxide -> calcium oxide
Burn the element in oxygen and you get the oxide
a metal oxide is a metal that is joined to oxygen. ex: copper oxide is copper joined to oxygen. :) :P by meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
Lead oxide is not a metal. Why?Lead is metal by itself, lead oxide is metal oxide, meaning it is a chemical compound that contains at least one atom of oxygen (thus oxide) and one other element (being a metal oxide, that one other element has to be metal, in this case lead).