Shut up....iron is an aluminum foil
Shut up....iron is an aluminum foil
iron
Yes, a mixture of iron foil and sulfur is a heterogeneous mixture. In such a mixture, the individual components retain their distinct properties and can be physically separated. The iron foil and sulfur can be observed as separate entities, making it clear that the mixture does not have a uniform composition throughout.
Aluminum foil is a type of metal. Steel, iron, copper, aluminum.. all of those are metals.
Rust is Iron oxide, so no.
No, tin foil is not magnetic. Tin foil is made of aluminum, which is not a magnetic material. Magnetism is a property of certain materials like iron, nickel, and cobalt.
Foil is made of aluminum, which, in this case, does not have magnetic properties.
Foil printing is to print some pattern with the foil on the fabric or paper for shinny effect. There are 2 kind of foil printing method. First, pattern is printed by glue on the fabric or paper, and then pressed with foil paper by hot steel roller. Second is printing on the foil paper first, and then press the foil on the fabric or paper. Of course with hot steel roller or iron. Foil paper look like cooking foil, but it is called the stamping foil paper. Actually it is not the paper but the detachable foil film on the plastic base.
yes you can but press lightly so you can see what you are ironing
Mainly iron, such as aluminum foil, cobalt, any iron coin, iron part of a pencil, specific iron rock called lodestone, and dull nail (the dull nail is actually shiny). Pretty much anything iron.
No. It's actually aluminum foil, and aluminum is not ferromagnetic. Aluminum foil can be repelled from a changing magnetic field, though (AC through an electromagnet).
plastic, paper, tins, tin foil, iron, copper, steel, cables, glass, etc.