no since alunimum floats steel does not
Steel.
I think it can float on water.
Some are some aren't. If they are made of steel as some juice cans and a few other beverage cans are they will be. If they are made of aluminum as almost all beverage cans are they will not be.
yes, it does
The density is not directly relevant. Otherwise, ship made of steel would not float on water.
The steel cans will be attracted.
It depends on the can. Soup cans might contain steel. Soda cans are made of aluminum.
using a magnet: steel atracts and aluminum doesn't
1. Steel cans arrive at a recycling center. 2. The cans are removed from the conveyor belt with an electromagnet. 3. The cans are smashed and baled. 4. The steel cans are delivered to a facility where they are melted and cast into ingots. 5. The steel ingots are rolled out into sheets. 6. These sheets are delivered to manufacturers that turn them into new cans.
No, food cans are made of steel, cans for nonacidic beverages are usually made of aluminum, cans for acidic beverages are made of steel. Steel is an alloy of iron and carbon, sometimes with other elements (some steel alloys include some nickel, but these are usually specialty steels and should not be needed in cans).
steel cans are coated in tin so whatever is in the tin does not react with the metal
people still use steel cans now for bottling their soft drinks.
You can use a large magnet. Aluminum isn't magnetic, but steel is... Try that out. You should write A for Aluminum and S for steel on the cans so you don't get mixed up.
Steel.
the aluminum cans don't attract and and steel attracts because its is made of iron and aluminum is not.
I think it can float on water.
Yes, if is empty.