depends on foil:
Aluminium is far and away the most common metal used to make foil.
the metal used is aluminum that's why it is called aluminum foil.
Aluminum foil, used for cooking and storing leftovers, is made from the element aluminum. Sometimes it is called tin foil, but tin is not used to make it.
Any metal or alloy which is malleable can be used in foil. Common foil for cooking use is made of aluminum. Gold foil is common for decorative use.
In the US, we spell it "aluminum"
Aluminium is used in kitchen foil.
One of them is Aluminum.
silver and aluminum
Aluminum.
Foil is a metal based product and is flexible. These two properties make foil a good candidate for use as a switch in certain applications. <<>> Foil is not used in a switch for conducting electricity. Silver plated contacts are used to carry the current.
This foil is also a metal.
Use the metal pen to scrape away the top layer. Scrape on top of the grey parts to turn them silver.
silver is used for making spaceships
Aluminum.
Silver foil is used to cook in a conventional oven; it cannot be used in a Microwave.
aluminum
Aluminium
Foil is a metal based product and is flexible. These two properties make foil a good candidate for use as a switch in certain applications. <<>> Foil is not used in a switch for conducting electricity. Silver plated contacts are used to carry the current.
Varakh, the shiny foil that is used to garnish sweetmeat, is sometimes made of real silver or real gold. These metals are made by pounding the metal into very thin sheets that are very brittle. Both metals are edible.
aluminium silver
why silver foils are used for decorting sweets
aluminium foil
What kind of foil? The stuff you get in the supermarket to wrap sandwiches is mostly aluminum (although it contains other elements - both added intentionally and picked up from the recycling process that a lot of aluminum goes through) but "foil" is just paper-thin sheet metal so any metal malleable enough to roll down to a few thousandths of an inch thickness, and strong enough to hold together when it's rolled that thin, can be made into foil. There's gold foil, silver foil, copper foil, tin foil - yes, "tin foil" that's really made out of tin exists - lead foil, iron foil, steel foil...Aluminium is the metal used in foil. Its symbol is Al. Its atomic number is 13.
Foil. Silver foil is a type of shiny metallic paper often used for wrapping food items or crafting.
Flattened silver looks sort of like tin foil. Or very shiny metal sheets.