See US patent 6083581 - they use a combination of a protein having an acidic isoelectric point (ex: beta-lactoglobuin) and kymene. Should work for paper or cellulose. The patent is still in effect so you will need to work on a project outside of this area.
All metals can form chemical compounds.
chlorine forms ionic compounds with metals and covalent compounds with non-metals.
Metals form compounds very easily with non-metals.
NO
For "only metals" the answer is alloys or intermetallic compounds, formed of course from atom of metals - the bonds are of metallic type.All other chemical compounds contain atoms of chemical elements, metals or nonmetals.
Chemical compounds have very different properties compared to metals.Metallic compounds have more similar qualities to original metals. All of these metals are good conductors of heat. All of them have a luster.
Yes, most molecular compounds do not contain metals. (The term "nonmetal" properly applies only to elements, not compounds.)
Metals and nonmetals form ionic compounds.
Mixing metals we can obtain alloys or inter-metallic compounds.
My answer is A.SULFUR, √ it out !
Michael Charles Baird has written: 'Organometallic compounds of the transition metals' -- subject(s): Transition metals, Organometallic compounds, Organoplatinum compounds
No, binary ionic compounds are made up of positively charged metal ions and negatively charged nonmetal ions. While metals can form ionic compounds with nonmetals, not all metals are involved in forming binary ionic compounds.