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No.
Gallium corresponds to eka-aluminum on the modern periodic table.
Gallium has been mixed with aluminum to help the fuel efficiency of cars. There have been increasing in drivability while keeping overall costs down.
It is used for the ore of copper.
Gallium is not found free in nature, and it is present in only ppm (parts per million) quantities in minerals. For that reason, we recover gallium (III) salt as a byproduct of bauxite (a chief ore of aluminum) and sphalerite (a primary ore of zinc) processing. In either case, gallium chloride (GaCl3) is the salt we generally extract. Recovery of gallium from other sources is negligible. Use the link below for more information on this interesting poor metal.
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No it wold not because Gallium is in the same family as Aluminum and therefore has similar properties to Aluminum. Aluminum does not react with acetic acid.
gallium
Gallium possess total inner electrons
After my opinion they are similar.
We know nickel is a transition element. We also know aluminum is a poor metal, as it gallium. Tellurium is a metalloid.
No.
GaNorGa1N1
Gallium (Ga) is element #31 on the periodic table just below Aluminum (Al).
boron (B), aluminum (Al), gallium (Ga), indium (In), thallium (Tl)
The elements immediately above and below aluminum in the same column of a wide form periodic table: boron and gallium. As is usual for relatively light elements, aluminum is more like the element below it, gallium, than the one above it: Aluminum and gallium are both metals, while boron is a nonmetal. In compounds with oxyanions, however, boron is similar to aluminum compounds with oxyanions.
Aluminum, Gallium, Indium, and Thallium.