steel is the first strongest.
titanium is the second,
copper is the third,
iron is the fourth
and bronze is the fith.
hope i helped with you question. : P
* steel * aluminium *titanium
strongest bases are the hydroxides of alkali metals and alkaline metals.
Titanium is one of them but not the strongest
the two strongest metals are steel and nickel,they are alloyed for with hard metals for high tensil.
Out of these metals, lithium has the strongest bonds. Aluminum has the weakest bonds and magnesium has somewhat strong bonds.
ferromagnitisation is the property of certain metals to form permannent magnets. these metals are attracted by magnet, this type of magnitisation is the strongest.
Can you define more clearly what you mean by 'Strongest'? That can cover a vast number of different categories and there are many different metals which can be considered the strongest, according to your specification.
Of the pure metals, tungsten and titanium are probably the strongest. Certainly tungsten heads the list as it has the highest tensile strength of all pure metals.
Alloy is the name for at least two different metals melted and blended together. Most of the metals we use are alloys, as their characteristics are usually better than the base metals.
This is the alkali metals family; the ionization energy is lower for these chemical elements.
Weakest metal would be mercury which is liquid at room temperature, closely followed by Gallium which will melt in your hand. Strongest metal - Uranium which is why they make armor piercing shells out of it.
The strongest known magnets are called magnetars, a sub-type of a neutron stars. If a human would approach such a magnetar within a thousand kilometers, the strong magnetic field would kill him.
It might be difficult to determine the "strongest" metal when considering the different characteristics attributed to metals. That said, it is probably tungsten that is the strongest of the metals (in pure form). It has the highest tensile strength of all pure metals. Alternately, titanium could be considered the strongest, as it has the highest strength-to-weight ratio of any metallic element.However, it is not possible to answer this question definitively, as there are three measures of strength: tensile strength (the ability to withstand being pulled apart without deforming), compressive strength (the ability to withstand being compressed without deforming), and shear strength (the ability to resist forces perpendicular to the items main axis, rather than along it, as with tensile or compressive forces). All metals have different characteristics, and the strongest in each category is not the same.In addition, when one says "metal," do you mean a metallic element, or any of the various metal alloys? There are only a very limited number of metallic elements, but there are an enormous number of metal alloys.