Elements having properties of both non-metals and metals are called Metalliods. Examples are boron, germanium, arsenic, silicon, antimony, etc.
These substances are metalloids, sometimes called semimetals. A common metalloid is silicon, Si.
The metalloids - B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te and Po. They are somewhere between metals and non-metals both in terms of properties, and position on the Periodic Table.
A metalloid, or semi-metal, has properties of a metal and a nonmetal.
The metalloids have properties of both metals and nonmetals.
carbon, silicon, and germanium
metalloid
metaloids
The elements that show properties of both metals and nonmetals are referred to as metalloids and include, boron, silicon, germanium, arsenic, polonium, tellurium, and antimony.
Nonmetals.
Metalloids do not contain either metals or nonmetals. They are elements that have properties of both metals and metalloids, and are found between the metals and nonmetals on the periodic table.
We generally refer to these elements as semiconductors. There is something akin to a "diagonal line of elements" in the periodic table that separates the metals from the nonmetals. Elements on the left of this diagonal are metals, and elements on the right are nonmetals. The elements that make up this diagonal are boron, silicon, germanium, arsenic, antimony, tellurium, polonium, and astatine, and they have both metallic and nonmetallic properties. awesome mean something good.
Elements with properties of both metals and nonmetals are called metalloids. They are located (rather conveniently) on the "stairstep" on the Periodic Table that separates metals and nonmetals. The metalloids are as follows:SiliconGermaniumArsenicAntimonyTelluriumScientists also suspect polonium is a metalloid, but they can't be sure as polonium is hard to test (it's very radioactive!).
Metalloids
Yes, metalloids are elements that have properties of both metals and nonmetals.
Elements are classified into classes based on their properties and characteristics. The main classes of elements are metals, nonmetals, and metalloids. Metals are typically shiny, malleable, and good conductors of heat and electricity. Nonmetals are typically dull, brittle, and poor conductors. Metalloids have properties of both metals and nonmetals.
The elements that show properties of both metals and nonmetals are referred to as metalloids and include, boron, silicon, germanium, arsenic, polonium, tellurium, and antimony.
The metalloids have properties of both metals and nonmetals.
An element that has properties of both metals and non-metals is called Metalloid. Example is Germanium.
The elements on the periodic table are ordered from left to right as metals, metalloids, and nonmetals. The left side consists mostly of metals, which are typically shiny, malleable, and good conductors of heat and electricity. In the middle, we have metalloids, which possess properties of both metals and nonmetals. The right side contains nonmetals, which are generally poor conductors of heat and electricity and have varying physical properties.
Nonmetals.
i think they have properties of both metals and nonmetals .
metalloid
metalloids
BoronSiliconGermaniumArsenicAntimonyTelluriumPolonium