Transition metals
Transitional elements.
you can't really. But if you need to then you can take the different kinds of skittle colors and make them in the shape of the PT (periodic table) and the sort the colors into alkaline metals, alkaline metals, metalloids, nonmetals, noble gases, transition metals, and inner transition metals. I would reccomend looking at a periodic table with color first.
You can find out what groups certain elements are in, and find there relative atomic masses. You can also find outy how reacticve they aRE AND HOW MANY ELECTRONS NEUTRONS AND PROTONS ARE IN CERTAIN ELEMENTS
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It's not, 'What do diagrams of isotopes look like,' rather ' What kinds different kinds do they have' Isotopes are just varied structures and/or forms of single elements. Which will contain the same amount of protons, but different amounts of neutrons.I hope this answer helped you!
No. "Organic" in chemistry terms means "contains carbon". Metals do not contain carbon (well, certain kinds of steel do, but I don't think anyone considers them organic). --------------------------------------------- More precisely, organic compounds build upon a carbon-hydrogen backbone with various substituents such as oxygen, sulfur, nitrogen, phosphorus, etc., even some metals though they are only present in trace amounts compared to the non-metal elements present.
On the Periodic Table there are the following Groups: Group 1 - Alkali Metals Group 2 - Alkaline Earth Metals Transition Metals - Including Lanthanides and Actinides Post Transition Metals Metalloids Other Non Metals Group 7 - Halogens Group 0 - Inert Gases
The 3 kinds of elements are metal, non-metals, and metalloids.
If you mean from the Periodic Table, then there are just two- Transition metals (Tm) and just metals.
Metals generally form cations
The Elements are Metalloids. They Act Like Non-Metals When They React With Metals
The 3 kinds of elements are metal, non-metals, and metalloids.
you can't really. But if you need to then you can take the different kinds of skittle colors and make them in the shape of the PT (periodic table) and the sort the colors into alkaline metals, alkaline metals, metalloids, nonmetals, noble gases, transition metals, and inner transition metals. I would reccomend looking at a periodic table with color first.
There are two kinds of bonding; ionic and covalent. Ionic bonds form between metals and non-metals. Covalent bonds form between non-metals
At room temperature, carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen are all non-metals.
Covalent and ionic. (The other major type of bond, metallic, does not occur in compounds but only in elemental metals and in mixtures of metals.)
Groups, in the periodic table of elements, are elements that all have the same number of valance electrons, which in turn tells us a lot about the kinds of chemical reactions that these elements will or will not undergo.
Non metals generally form anions. They gain electrons during ionic bonding.