the use of vanadium in the body has really been controversial, but its helps in insulin sensitivity and also body building so in answering your question, we are yet to prove if you can live without vanadium.
we would die
You would die
no david didnt die if he did it would be all over the news duhh ) anyway all i know is he didnt die otherwise you would know by now :0)
If a vanadium fluoride compound were to break down into vanadium and fluoride, it would likely involve a reduction reaction. Vanadium in the compound would lose electrons to form vanadium in a lower oxidation state, while fluoride ions would stay as fluoride. The overall reaction would involve breaking chemical bonds and the transfer of electrons.
Vanadium is a solid metal at room temperature.
There will die
She didnt die?!!!!!!! Or else it would have been all over the news didnt you see her at the thanksgiving macys parade in ny?!?!?!?!?!
I would not say that iron does "tend to form a bond with vanadium". Certainly vanadium is present in small amounts in some steels for example . An alloy ferro vanadium is produced industrially and used in steel manufacture.
Vanadium is a solid metal, not a gas. It boils at over 6100 degrees Fahrenheit, so vanadium vapor would completely scorch your nasal passages before you had a chance to smell anything.
The latin name is also vanadium
Vanadium symbol: V the atom number for Vanadium is V23 the relative atomic mass for Vanadium is 51
She didnt exactly have a c section, she had to get it out or it would eat its way out. and she would die