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it is an element
Not in aluminum foil. Aluminum foil is all aluminum. Large pieces of refined aluminum (blocks weighing over a thousand pounds) are rolled and rolled until a sheet of foil a fraction of an inch thick results. Some 50 miles of foil are rolled onto a spool at the end of the line. And two sheets are rolled out at the same time, one pressed to the other. That's why aluminum foil has a shiny side and a dull side. The dull sides are the "inside" where the two sheets are pressed together in the manufacturing process. If you have a chance to see the process, go look. If you want a virtual tour, use the link and watch the video on how foil is made. It's really cool!
it's an element
an element. its made entirely out of aluminum
"Foil" can be any thin flexible sheets of metal- but the foil you use in the kitchen is made of aluminum. Carbon, being a nonmetal and generally rather brittle, would not make a good foil.
aluminum
That element is aluminum.
Aluminum
Apples, asparagus and avocados are found in the kitchen. Aprons and aluminum foil are kitchen items.
Lots of elements can be rolled very to make a foil:gold - used as gold leaf for gilding wood and many other objectssilver - much cheaper than gold and was used to wrap things beforealuminum came along - used to wrap food, chocolate, etc.
Either Tin (Sn) or Aluminum (Al) are used in foil wrap. Hope this helps!
it is an element
Aluminum foil is made of Aluminum, which is an element. So yes Aluminum foil is a element
Kitchen foil despite sometimes being called tin foil is actually made of aluminium. Kitchen foil is simply very thin sheets of aluminium.
because aluminum foil is really metal and metal is an element.
The element that is commonly found in bauxite is aluminum. Aluminum is used to make foil for household use, as well as soda cans.
Rolled is when you roll the dough into a sausage shape with the help of clingfilm or kitchen foil, leave it to chill in the fridge, then cut disks to bake. Drop cookies involve dropping mixture onto baking sheets, then baking. Drop cookies are quicker, but less neat.