mixture of tin and lead, and nothing will happen. If tin atom reacts with lead atom, none of the atoms will oxidise even if they are heated. because reaction will only occur when a metal react with acid and so on.
A solution of copper and tin is a mixture at the atomic leverl. No amount of optical magnification can reveal the different metals in the alloy. The mixture is a random arrangement of copper and tin atoms.
No, most metals do not react with each other, By melting "together" you'll make a mixture named Lead-Tin alloy: Tin forms a eutectic mixture with lead containing 63% tin and 37% lead, used as "solder"
Solder Also Pewter is a malleable metal alloy, traditionally 85-99% tin, with the remainder consisting of copper, antimony, bismuth and lead.
Lead and tin are good conductors, as are all metals. That is a result of the metallic bond, in which the constituent atoms in a piece of metal share their electrons with each other in the form of a cloud of electrons, all of which can move very freely and are not attached to any particular atom or region.
Tin is closely chemically related to Lead and Germanium.
Tin and lead makes pewter
Tin and lead make solder.
Bronze
no cause its TIN TIN THE MOVIE
Any of various fusible alloys, usually tin and lead, used to join metallic parts.
Lead has more protons. Lead contains 82 protons, while tin only contains 50.
Tin is more conductive. Lead is used to ease application.
No, because tin is above lead in the activity series.
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A solution of copper and tin is a mixture at the atomic leverl. No amount of optical magnification can reveal the different metals in the alloy. The mixture is a random arrangement of copper and tin atoms.
There are two formulas, one containing 71.5 parts of tin to 27.8 of lead, the other 78.2 of tin to 21.7 of lead.