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metals conduct heat, transmit electricity, and are usually ductile. non-metals do not conduct heat well, do not transmit electricity and can't be hammered into shapes. noble gases cannot combine with any other elements.
No; the noble gas family doesn't contain any metals in it, it only has gases. Also it contains all of the least reactive elements. The most reactive metals are in the alkali metal family, group 1, lithoium , sodium, poatssium etc..
an alloy is a mix of two or more metals so lead and any other metals
The properties of metals are determined by their structure. Metals usually have the atoms arranged closely together in a compact form. It is this compactness that gives metals the different qualities such as strength, i.e. the atoms are bonded together very strongly. Weak bonds would make for weak structures. Basically, all metals have a compact arrangement of atoms, ensuring there is minimal space between them. While the strong bonding explains the strength that metals possess, how does one explain the other properties of metals, such as malleability, ductility, conductivity, etc? The fact that metals have these properties suggest a delocalized nature of bonding. The delocalized nature, complemented by the strong bonding is what gives metals their various properties. Basically, bonding in metals happen between atoms of low electronegativity, which means that there is not too strong an attraction between the valence electrons of the metal atom. The valence electrons are the outermost electrons among all in the atom, and since these have low attractively, they can be shared with the other atoms around them, thereby strengthening the bonds between the atoms themselves. Metallic bonding differs from other kinds of bonding in this respect - the valence electrons can be shared and are therefore considered free-form
Metals (and also transition metals are considered even though they aren't in specific families, they are the same as any other metal, nothing special.)
Each metal has its own specific set of properties. Some metals are better conductors than others. Some metals have higher melting temperatures than others, there is even a metal that is in a liquid state at room temperature, that metal is called Mercury. Same metals are more malleable than others. They also differ in weights, in density.
metals conduct heat, transmit electricity, and are usually ductile. non-metals do not conduct heat well, do not transmit electricity and can't be hammered into shapes. noble gases cannot combine with any other elements.
Alkali metals are very reactive metals.
metalloids are different from metals and non metals as they consist the properties of both metals and non metals. but they cannot put under any of the catergories. just a metalloid
Hydrogen is its own family, with no close relatives.It is in column 1 of the periodic table but is not much like any other element. Hydrogen doesn't share common properties with any other group so it is in a family of its own.____On the periodic table hydrogen is placed with the alkali metals. The alkali metals form Group 1. While hydrogen seems different to the other members of this family:it is a gas not solidit forms diatomic moleculesIt does react with the same types of cations to form to form similar compounds. At extremely low temperatures (near absolute zero) it solidifies into a metallic solid.
Under standard conditions, hydrogen is a non-metal (H2 gas,) but chemically, it can actually behave like a metal. Often, it bonds with other non-metals in the same proportion as other group 1 elements, all of which (except hydrogen) are alkali metals. It can also bond with metals as a hydride, where it acts more like a non-metal. Acids can lose a hydrogen ion, which has a charge of +1, just like many metals. Finally, under extreme pressure, hydrogen can actually become a metallic liquid; it is theorized that Jupiter's core is composed of liquid metallic hydrogen.
Hydrogen is its own family, with no close relatives.It is in column 1 of the Periodic Table but is not much like any other element. Hydrogen doesn't share common properties with any other group so it is in a family of its own.____On the periodic table hydrogen is placed with the alkali metals. The alkali metals form Group 1. While hydrogen seems different to the other members of this family:it is a gas not solidit forms diatomic moleculesIt does react with the same types of cations to form to form similar compounds. At extremely low temperatures (near absolute zero) it solidifies into a metallic solid.
Copper is used because of its higher conductivity. Although silver has more conductivity then copper but it is not used because of its cost, however silver is used in some specialized equipments such as satellites. Copper or any other metals conductivity properties is based on its electronegativity. Generally, all metals must have low electronegativity and ionization energies. But all metals do not have the same electronegativity levels.
No; the noble gas family doesn't contain any metals in it, it only has gases. Also it contains all of the least reactive elements. The most reactive metals are in the alkali metal family, group 1, lithoium , sodium, poatssium etc..
Lead isn't "made out of" any other metals. It's an element.
You may use any two metals which have different thermal expansion properties. Steel and brass are commonly used because of cheapness. There is not even a need for them to be metals - you could bond two glasses of different thermal properties, and these would bend as well.
No; the noble gas family doesn't contain any metals in it, it only has gases. Also it contains all of the least reactive elements. The most reactive metals are in the alkali metal family, group 1, lithoium , sodium, poatssium etc..