Lithium is a silvery and very soft metal.
Lithium can mix with various materials, such as other metals (e.g., aluminum, copper) to form alloys. It is commonly used in lithium-ion batteries, which mix lithium with other materials like cobalt, nickel, and manganese for improved performance. Additionally, lithium can be combined with non-metallic substances such as sulfur or oxygen to form compounds like lithium sulfide or lithium oxide.
Lithium metal itself is odorless. However, lithium compounds may have a slight metallic or ammonia-like odor.
On the periodic table the metal Lithium is written Li
The lithium ion is essentially the same as the lithium atom, except it has lost 1 electrons. The number of protons and neutrons remain the same. Thus, the lithium ion, Li+ has 3 neutrons, just like the lithium atom.
Lithium reacts vigorously (but not violently) with water.
chlorine
LiHCO3 is lithium bicarbonate, a chemical compound that is not commonly found in nature. It is used in some industrial processes and in laboratory settings, but is not as widely used as other lithium compounds like lithium carbonate or lithium hydroxide.
Lithium is used in those pills for people with mood swings like "Midol" lol XD
No. Lithium is a metallic element. Amphetamines are organic compounds.
Lithium compounds such as lithium nitrite produce a strong red when heated strongly in a Bunsen burner. You can see this by searching for lithium flame colour on youtube.com.You can see its spectrum on wikipedia.
I like don't know!!!!
Na is chemically more like Li than Mg, only physically (measurements, mass) it looks more like Mg