Magnesium, calcium, sodium, lithium, uranium, plutonium can be flammable - depending on the temperature and the physical form.
Titanium is flammable at high temperature.
Chemical symbols are: Mercury-Hg, Gold-Au, Silver-Ag, Arsenic-As, Radon-Rn, Plutonium-Pu, Uranium-U, Potassium-K, Sodium-Na, Titanium-Ti.
Titanium is placed between aluminium and magnesium.
sodium potassium calcium zinc iron magnesium manganese
To prevent the magnesium or sodium reacting with oxygen in the air
No, for instance Ilmenite is not poisonous.
The mantle has oxygen, silicon, aluminum, iron, calcium, sodium, potassium, magnesium, and titanium in it.
Chemical symbols are: Mercury-Hg, Gold-Au, Silver-Ag, Arsenic-As, Radon-Rn, Plutonium-Pu, Uranium-U, Potassium-K, Sodium-Na, Titanium-Ti.
They are GALLIUM and CAESIUM that can even melt if we keep them on our palm.
Magnesium is lighter.
The ore rutile (impure titanium (IV) oxide) is heated with chlorine and coke at a temperature of about 900°C. Then the Titanium chloride is reduced using Magnesium and distilled to get rid of the Magnesium chloride (Magnesium atoms displaced titanium atoms). Then you get titanium.
Hydrogen, Lithium, Beryllium, Magnesium, Sodium, Potassium, Calcium, Aluminum, Barium, Titanium, Rubidium, Cesium, Francium, Scandium, Iron, Nickle, Cobalt, Copper, Tin, Zinc, Gallium, Lead, Polonium, Bismuth, Mercury, Uranium, Plutonium, Strontium, Osmium, Tungsten, Europium, Lawrencium, Cerium, Thorium, Technetium, Tellurium, Yttrium, Ytterbium, ....and more.
Lithium, Sodium, Magnesium, Aluminum, Potassium, Calcium, Scandium, Titanium, Vanadium, Chromium, Iron, Cobalt, Nickel, Copper, Zinc etc
Titanium is placed between aluminium and magnesium.
sodium potassium calcium zinc iron magnesium manganese
Titanium is less reactive than magnesium, but it's a moot point. What's labelled as a Magnesium frame is usually a (mainly) Aluminum alloy, with some magnesium in it.
No, the Sony Vaio Titanium laptop is in fact not made from titanium, it does have a magnesium alloy casing though.
Magnesium, Titanium