Tin is more reactive.
sodium, calcium, magnesium, aluminium, zinc, iron, tin and led are metals more reactive than hydrogen.
No, an ionic compound is made when you fuse a non metal and a metal together, the metal gives a number of its electrons to the non metal which makes the metal positively charged and the non metal negatively charged. Then the two elements are drown together through electo-static attraction. Copper and tin would make just make a metal alloy:)
no... Reactivity Table: Lithium, Potassium, Sodium, Calcium, Magnesium, Aluminum, Zinc, Cadmium, Iron, Nickel, Tin, Lead, Arsenic, Antimony, Copper, Mercury, Silver Platinum, and Gold.
Tin
In between these two, there are nickel, tin lead and hydrogen.They all are more reactive than copper but less reactive than iron.For your convenience, here is the reactive series of elements in order of decreasing reactivity:-Potassiumsodiumbariumcalciummagnesiumaluminiummanganesezincironnickeltinleadhydrogencoppermercurysilvergoldplatinum
no
Tin is more reactive.
It is as reactive as indium. Just kidding, it is reactive. Hoe reactive, more reactive than silver, but not as reactive as tin.
B. Calcium C. Aluminum
Not very. This strong, tough metal resists corrosion extremely well. It doesn't want to react with very much.
sodium, calcium, magnesium, aluminium, zinc, iron, tin and led are metals more reactive than hydrogen.
No product is produced. Both cooper and tin are not reactive metals.
Food cans are coated with tin instead of zinc because zinc is more reactive than tin. Tin is only reactive to powerful acids such as tri-sodium phosphate while zinc can be reactive to something like tomatoes.
Yes Iron, Steel and alloy
Yes, iron is more reactive than calcium as iron is a metal and generally metals are more reactive than non-metals and calcium is a non-metal.
Tin is highly reactive.