Sodium is more malleable than iron. But sodium may catch fire may exposed to air / moisture.
One atom of sodium weighs more than one atom of oxygen. Thus, one mole of sodium weighs more than one mole of oxygen.
Fe - which is the symbol for Iron. Li is Lithium Na is Sodium K is Potassium Lithium, Sodium, and Potassium are all Alkali Metals. Iron is a metal in the 1st transition series - quit a bit to the right of the alkali metals in the Period Table.
Yes. One Sodium atom and one Chlorine atom make a compound called Sodium Chloride, more commonly known as salt.
Think it magnesium
Sodium. Sodium is more reactive than calcium, because sodium has one valence electron whereas calcium has two valence electron. It is easier to lose one electron and react with oxygen and form sodium oxide, compared to losing two electrons and from calcium oxide.
No difference. Invoking "element" simply refers to chemcial properties, and these are present in the atom as well.
One atom of sodium weighs more than one atom of oxygen. Thus, one mole of sodium weighs more than one mole of oxygen.
one liter of iron
A sodium ion has one more proton than electrons, as the outermost electron has been lost.
There are two iron chlorides iron(II) chloride (ferrous chloride) and iron(III) chloride (ferric chloride. Both are termed salts. Both are ionic. and are often encountered as hydrates e.g. FeCl3.6H2O.
Fe - which is the symbol for Iron. Li is Lithium Na is Sodium K is Potassium Lithium, Sodium, and Potassium are all Alkali Metals. Iron is a metal in the 1st transition series - quit a bit to the right of the alkali metals in the Period Table.
The right question should be: Does one mole of iron weigh the same as one mole of iron oxide? The answer is NO, Iron Oxide weighs more.
Yes. One Sodium atom and one Chlorine atom make a compound called Sodium Chloride, more commonly known as salt.
The compound for salt is sodium chloride. One type does not "contain" more.
Elements are substances which contain only one sort of atom. Examples of elements are: Sodium, Tungsten, Iron, Bismuth, Astatine, Xenon and Ytterbium. If your doing a physics crossword it is sodium
there are the serving sizes calories sodium vitamins a b, c and more iron calcium footnote grams carbohydrates there are many parts not one single part is most important
Iron doesn't beet. Edit: No iron in beets. Even if there were, iron is lost when you cook something for a long time in water.