Lithium is a metal with silvery appearance, with low density, soft and reactive.
Lithium is rarely found in its pure state in nature. It is usually found in compounds, such as lithium carbonate and lithium chloride, in minerals like spodumene and lepidolite. However, pure lithium can be extracted from these compounds through various chemical processes.
Lithium is the third element of the periodic table and was discovered in 1817 by a chemist named Arfvedson; This is the first metal encountered in the periodic table and it is a silvery colored solid when purified. One thing to remember is that lithium is never found alone in nature. It is always bonded to other elements. Scientists use the letter pair "Li" to represent lithium in chemical equations.
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Elemental lithium is NOT a natural resource. Lithium is found as an ion in a combined state, such as lithium carbonate. The reason why lithium is not found naturally is because it is too reactive a metal.
Pure lithium is naturally produced by the process of fusion in our stars, including our sun.
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Almost certainly by electrolysis of molten lithium chloride.
Lithium is an element. As such, it has no other substance in it, it is pure lithium. If you wished to analyse it further, you would have to break it down into subatomic particles.
Lithium's state of matter is solid. It can be made into a liquid but its true form is solid.
The chemical symbol for lithium is Li.
Lithium in its standard state is a solid metal.
Pure plutonium is obtained as a result of the reaction of PuF4 with calcium, barium or lithium.