Hydrogen is not exactly a metal, but has a bonding charge of +1, meaning that it will only bond with materials with negative values. Usually only metals have positive bonding properties, and non-metals the negative.
See:
Is_hydrogen_a_metal_nonmetal_or_metalloid
For further details.
hydrogen is a non metal but it has been classified with metals in the Periodic Table as well as the reactivity series.........................
In case of periodic table H accompanies alkali metals because
In the reactivity series H has been included to show which metals are reactive than H and also because it loses electrons to form +ve ions
Due to follwing reasons:
Hydrogen is sometimes classified as a metal because it can give away electrons like metals do.
because it makes acids ,since all non metals form acid,therefore hydrogen is some times called a non metal
It has one valence electron, so it should be with group 1.
is a nonmetal and is placed above group in the periodic table because it has ns1electron configuration like the alkali metals.
Hydrogen classified as a nonmetal because it is not a metal. At room temperature it is a gas. It is reactive but has zero metallic character.
metal + acid -> salt + water metal + oxygen -> metal oxide metal oxide + acid -> salt + water metal + water -> metal hydroxide + hydrogen Metal + Steam -> Metal Oxide + Hydrogen Metal + Acid -> Metal salt + Hydrogen
Rubidium (symbol Rb) is a metal. It belongs to group 1 or alkali metals.
Metal + Acid = Salt + Hydrogen Any metal that reacts with hydrochloric acid will form a metal chloride salt and hydrogen Sodium metal and hydrochloric acid
The lightest 'non-metal' could be Hydrogen and Helium! Both are gases, and therefore, not a metal.
The terms metal and non-metal are usually applied to the elements. Hydrogen fluoride is a covalent gas- it is a chemical compound.
In the first column, under hydrogen. Although hydrogen is in that column, it is not an alkali metal. Hydrogen is in it's own group, popularized as the "group of one"
Due to follwing reasons:Lightest element with lowest atomic number.similarity in electronic configuration.Same number of valence electrons.
Hydrogen is usually listed as a nonmetal; but if you want to get technical, it is in a class all its own.
No. Hydrogen is a nonmetal. It is only put in the alkali metal column because it has a similar electron configuration.
No, it isn't. One of the clues of telling that is isn't, is that hydrogen is a gas, and If it was an alkali METAL, it would not be a gas, but a metal. Its place on the table does make sense, though; hydrogen tends to behave like other members of it's column in chemical reactions. For example, All of the alkali metals, and hydrogen Combine with oxygen to form the compound X2O, where "X" is either Hydrogen, Lithium, Sodium, Potasium, Rubidium, Cesium, or Francium.
Hydrogen is a non-metal; it's in group VII
CH3 does not exist by itself but is definitely not a metal.
Hydrogen
hydrogen is a non metal
What is hydrogen in pd metal?
hydrogen is a non-metal
Hydrogen, symbol H, atomic number 1, is a non metal.