Tine and indium are metals. Antimony is a metalloid. they all have a silvery appearance. Indium and tin are soft metals- with low melting points compared to many other metals. All three commonly exhibit two oxidation states in compounds, Tin(II) and Tin (IV); Indium (I) and Indium (III) and antomony(IIi) , antimony(V)
Perhaps the most obvious similarity is that they are in the same period of the Periodic Table, In atomic number 49; Sn atomic number 50 and Sb atomic number 51
Brass is an alloy of Copper and Zinc. Originally solder is an alloy of Tin and Lead. Lead-free solders in commercial use may contain tin, copper, silver, bismuth, indium, zinc, antimony, and traces of other metals.
People do not make Indium. It is a soft, malleable, silvery-white metallic element found primarily in ores of zinc and tin.
Yes it cries it is known as the "tin cry"
"Pewter" is a somewhat ambiguous term for a variety of alloys composed mainly of tin. There isn't necessarily a fixed percentage of antimony, but if you're looking for a rough estimate... around 5% or less is typical. You can roughly estimate the percentage of tin by the hardness of the alloy... softer alloys contain higher percentages of tin and lower percentages of copper and/or antimony.
A 'white metal' used to line bearings in the main journals of the crankshaft of an engine for example
Tin (Sn) Molar Mass = 118.71 g/mol
Which is the pentavalent impurity is boron or germanium or indium or antimony
Indium: 49 protons/electrons, 66 neutronsTin: 50 protons/electrons, 69 neutronsAntimony: 51 protons/electrons, 71 neutrons
According to the Periodic Table in the Related Link, they are: Aluminum, Gallium, Germanium, Indium, Tin, Antimony, Thallium, Lead, Bismuth, and Polonium.
Which will serve as a donor impurity in silicon is boron or germanium or antimony or indium
Indium is a metal, and therefore not a nonmetal.
are tin and antimony in the same element group
Any of various fusible alloys, usually tin and lead, used to join metallic parts.
Brass is an alloy of Copper and Zinc. Originally solder is an alloy of Tin and Lead. Lead-free solders in commercial use may contain tin, copper, silver, bismuth, indium, zinc, antimony, and traces of other metals.
Yes it means no lead at all, lead free solders commonly include tin, copper, silver, bismuth, indium, zinc, antimony, and traces of other metals but not lead.
The element indium is a soft malleable, silvery white element found primarily "in the ores of zinc and tin".
It is as reactive as indium. Just kidding, it is reactive. Hoe reactive, more reactive than silver, but not as reactive as tin.