Antimony is a metalloid which means that it has metallic and nonmetallic properties and it is element 51 in the Periodic Table lying in the diagonal metalloids in the p group. The metallic and nonmetallic properties may be, for example, that it is grey and shiny like a metal but it may also be brittle and not conduct heat and electricity like a nonmetal.
Antimony is a metalloid which means that it has metallic and nonmetallic properties and it is element 51 in the periodic table lying in the diagonal metalloids in the p group. The metallic and nonmetallic properties may be, for example, that it is grey and shiny like a metal but it may also be brittle and not conduct heat and electricity like a nonmetal.
A salt is made when a acid reacts with a base which equalises in both being neutrlized.
The rule is that the metallic (or the less electronegative) element goes first, and the non-metallic (or more electronegative) element goes second. And the second element has an alteration in its name to indicate the formation of a compound. For example, sodium + chlorine = sodium chloride.
The location of an element in the periodic table of elements tells you its general chemical properties. Elements are of essentially 3 types, metal, non metal, or noble gas (which is a special type of non metal) and those all have their own locations on the table; in addition you can tell a lot about how chemically active an element is, or in other words, how metallic is it, or how non metallic. We know for example, that the the halogens, in group seven, are most non metallic at the top of the table, and become progressively less non metallic (or in other words more metallic) as you go down the column. The noble gases are at their most inert at the top of the column. And so forth.
zinc,silver,gold and more:)hope it helped
Antimony is a metalloid which means that it has metallic and nonmetallic properties and it is element 51 in the Periodic Table lying in the diagonal metalloids in the p group. The metallic and nonmetallic properties may be, for example, that it is grey and shiny like a metal but it may also be brittle and not conduct heat and electricity like a nonmetal.
A good example may be mercury, which is a metal but is a liquid at room temperature, a unique feature not found in other metals.
Yes,for example Mg (Magnesium) is a metallic solid.
Chlorine would be an example of a non metallic element.
Antimony is a metalloid which means that it has metallic and nonmetallic properties and it is element 51 in the periodic table lying in the diagonal metalloids in the p group. The metallic and nonmetallic properties may be, for example, that it is grey and shiny like a metal but it may also be brittle and not conduct heat and electricity like a nonmetal.
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Reduction
A salt is made when a acid reacts with a base which equalises in both being neutrlized.
Copper is a non-ferrous metal because it is not made of iron.
The rule is that the metallic (or the less electronegative) element goes first, and the non-metallic (or more electronegative) element goes second. And the second element has an alteration in its name to indicate the formation of a compound. For example, sodium + chlorine = sodium chloride.
An mono-atomic cation- a positively charged ion of, for example, a metallic element.