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No. The aluminum can does not have magnetic properties.
Aluminum, Gallium, Tin, Bismuth, and everything to their left (excluding Hydrogen) are metals. Boron, Silicon, Germanium, Arsenic, Antimony, Tellurium, and Polonium are the metalloids. Carbon, Phosphorus, Selenium, Iodine, Astatine and everything to their right (including Hydrogen) are all nonmetals.
No, each one is in a three different period from the other two!
Malleable, brittle, ductile
None of those elements are nonmetals.The outlier of the group is aluminium, which is usually considered a metal. The other three are all normally though of as being "metalloids".
7 metalloids:BoronArsenicAntimonyTelluriumPoloniumSiliconGermanium
Boron, silicon, germanium, arsenic, antimony, and tellurium are recognised. These elements include, hydrogen, beryllium, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, zinc, gallium.
The metalloids are Boron, Silicon, Germanium, Arsenic, Antimony, Tellurium, and Polonium. They are all located around a "stairstep" (called that because it is that sort of pattern) on the Periodic Table, between the metals and the nonmetals.
We know nickel is a transition element. We also know aluminum is a poor metal, as it gallium. Tellurium is a metalloid.
It would be Aluminum, which is a metal, not a metalloid.
mixture of aluminum and an unknown element later called Germanium.
They are surrounding the staircase line in the periodic table. But not all of them are semimetals. Boron(B), Silicon(Si), Germanium(Ge), Arsenic(As), Antimony(Sb) and Tellurium(Te) are semimetals. Aluminum(Al) and Polonium(Po) are metals. The remaining ones surrounding the staircase line are non-metals.
Nope. Only those surrounding the staircase line in the periodic table are metalliods. Boron(B), Silicon(S), Germanium(Ge), Arsenic(As), Antimony(Sb), Tellurium(Te) are metalloids. Aluminum(Al) and Polonium(Po) are metals. The others are non-metals.
Aluminum has a molar mass of 26.98 you just have to look on your periodic table
eka aluminum is gallium eka boron is scandium eka silicon is germanium
Aluminum and Germanium exhibit amphotric behavior explane.
tungsten filament, aluminum base