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It is a meltalloid oxide.
by using electrolysis
Metal oxide + Water --> Metal hydroxide
yes
metal + acid -> salt + water metal + oxygen -> metal oxide metal oxide + acid -> salt + water metal + water -> metal hydroxide + hydrogen Metal + Steam -> Metal Oxide + Hydrogen Metal + Acid -> Metal salt + Hydrogen
Calcium is a metal, therefore this is a metal oxide.
Phosphorus is not an oxide. It is an element. It is a nonmetal.
The oxidation of a metal produces a metal oxide. For example, calcium + oxide -> calcium oxide
a metal oxide is a metal that is joined to oxygen. ex: copper oxide is copper joined to oxygen. :) :P by meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
actually you can still extract lead from lead oxide, but you need to do this experiment with carbon or other reducing agent e.g. hydrogen and with a high temperature Celsius. But the reason that you can extract the mercury from the mercury oxides exactly is the higher reactivity of the lead. higher the reactivity means more difficult to extract the metals from the ore. so it is possible for lead to extract it from the lead oxide
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).
It is a meltalloid oxide.
by using electrolysis
No. A metal oxide can be thought of as the product of burning a metal. In essence it has already burned.
Metal oxide + Water --> Metal hydroxide
yes
Yes.