Vanadium is an example of d-block element or transition metal. It is a hard, silvery gray, ductile and malleable transition metal. The element is found only in chemically combined form in nature, but once isolated artificially, the formation of an oxide layer stabilizes the free metal somewhat against further oxidation.
The element Vanadium is a metal .
It's a metal. Specifically, a transition metal.
Yes, the differentiating electron of vanadium is entering into d-subshell and in its stable oxidation state(+3) vanadium has incompletely filled d orbital. So vanadium is a transition metal.
As a simple element it is nonpolar, as are all elements.
Tungsten (or wolfram, W) is a metal.
metal
Vanadium is a metal.
Br2 (Bromine gas) is a nonpolar molecule because the two bromine atoms have the same electronegativity, resulting in a balanced distribution of electrons and no net dipole moment.
C10H8 (naphthalene) is nonpolar because it consists of only carbon and hydrogen atoms, which have similar electronegativities. As a result, the molecule does not have any significant dipole moment and is considered nonpolar.
I2 is non-polar
Oil is nonpolar because it consists of long hydrocarbon chains that do not have any significant charged regions. This means oil is overall neutral and does not interact strongly with polar substances like water.
non polar
non-polar
non polar
It is non polar.
Polar contains polar. Non-polar contains nothing.
water is polar and immiscible with the non-polar octanol.
ClO4 is polar.