No. Carbon dioxide is a covalently bonded compound that is very different from a metal.
the metal carbonate decomposes into a metal oxide and carbon dioxide
Carbon Dioxide is a compound formed by a Carbon and Oxygen. Only an element can be classified as a metal, non-metal or a metalloid. Compounds cannot be classified in these categories. Carbon and oxygen both are non-metals.
When a metal burns, it typically reacts with oxygen in the air to form metal oxides, rather than carbon dioxide. However, if the metal is part of a compound that contains carbon, such as hydrocarbons or certain metal carbonates, burning it can produce carbon dioxide as a byproduct. In general, pure metals do not produce carbon dioxide when they burn.
Carbon dioxide is a non-metal.
Yes, carbon dioxide is a compound composed of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms. Carbon is considered a nonmetal element, while oxygen is also a nonmetal element.
Yes, inorganic compound contain carbon such as carbon dioxide, metal carbonates, metal bicarbonates,carbon monoxide and metal carbides
Carbon dioxide can react with some metals, like magnesium or lithium, to form metal carbonates. In the presence of moisture, carbon dioxide can also corrode metal surfaces, leading to the formation of metal carbonates or metal oxides. Additionally, carbon dioxide can react with metal compounds, such as metal hydroxides, to form metal carbonates through a neutralization reaction.
Both metal carbonates and metal hydrogen carbonates form carbon dioxide when mixed with acid.
Its non-metal
The metal carbonate will undergo a neutralization reaction with the acid, producing carbon dioxide gas, water, and a salt. The carbon dioxide gas can be observed as effervescence in the reaction mixture.
When carbon reacts with lead oxide, it produces lead metal and carbon dioxide as byproduct.
Acid reacts with metal carbonate to produce salt, carbon dioxide, and water. The reaction with metal bicarbonate also produces salt, carbon dioxide, and water, but it tends to release more carbon dioxide gas due to the presence of bicarbonate ion.