I have included some related links that may help you
All the best
Afraid not. These are elements. But the actual vitamins may contain sodium and iron, and even copper seems essential to life.
Copper cannot displace metals that are more reactive than itself. Examples include Sodium, Aluminum, Iron, Magnesium, etc.
Yes. of course.
This metal is sodium.
Iron does not displace sodium from a salt solution because it is not reactive enough. Iron does, however, displace Cu from a copper sulphate solution.
Iron, Steel, Bronze, Copper, Silver, I believe these are all metals....
Bronze (Copper + Tin), Steel (Iron + Carbon), Brass (Copper + Zinc), Sodium Amalgam (Mercury + Sodium), Ferrochrome (Iron, Chromium) For more see the related link below
In our tap water, you can find minerals such as: sodium, potassium, manganese , iron, copper and calcium. The chemicals are typically just chlorine and fluorine. :)
Sodium iron copper
Magnesium, Iron, Copper,sodium and potassium
Neon is not even a metal! It is a noble gas, so relatively unreactive. Copper is a moderatly unreactive metal, more reactive metals include pottassium, sodium, zinc & iron.
Some major minerals include sodium, potassium, chloride, magnesium, phosphorus, and sulfur. Some minor (trace) minerals include iron, zinc, copper, chromium, iodine, and selenium.