Silicon doesnt really react a lot unless it is under extremely high temperatures
The reaction is balanced from the start. Na2CO3 + SiO2 --> Na2SiO3 + CO2
Silicon and oxygen, in this form. SiO2 Silicon dioxide.
no it is not a nonmetal. Silicon is a metalloid
Silicon carbide consists of silicon and carbon, quartz consists of silicon and oxygen.
Silicon is the most abundant element. Sand is SiO2
no
Yes, you can make silicon dioxide out of silicon.
Silicon (Si) doesn't react with water.
Silicon and oxygen combine to produce silicon dioxide, SiO2, which is found in nature as quartz or sand.
Yes it can. Si + O2 --> SiO2
it is acidic!
No because Neon already has 8 valence electrons.
carbon is one of them, they are in the same column
because the outer valence is incomplete.
Silicon aka Si
Plutonium react with hydrogen, oxygen, halogens, carbon, nitrogen, silicon, sulfur, phosphorous, acids, etc. Plutonium is a reactive metal.
No. Chlorine is more reactive than silicon. This is because Chlorine has 7 valence electrons; nearly a full outer shell, while silicon has only 4 valence electrons. An element needs 8 valence electrons to react, and Chlorine only needs one more valence electron before it can react, unlike Silicon, which needs 4.