"Top answer" says "Yes", totally WRONG. Correct answer is: "NO". Firstly, correct spelling is "paraben" with an "e". Parabens are a group of similar ORGANIC (carbon based) compounds that DON'T contain any aluminum or zirconium. Aluminum zirconium tetrachlorohydrex gly (aka "AZG") is totally different, as the image shows. The only commonality: both are typical ingredients in Skin Care products.
yes
Yes. "Paraban" is a misspelled word--there are parabens but not parabans.
Aluminium foil is made from pure aluminium; aluminium sulfide is Al2S3.
40 protons and 40 electrons.The most stable isotope of zirconium (Zr-91) has 51 protons.
yes. some people spell aluminium, other aluminum.
Aluminium and titanium are about the same but aluminium is more reactive. platinum is the least reactive metal
Yes. "Paraban" is a misspelled word--there are parabens but not parabans.
it is an element because all the atoms present in zirconium are same
Zirconium is in period 5. And the noble gas in this period is xenon
Zirconium and titanium are in the group 4 (titanium group) of the periodic table of Mendeleev.
Zirconium
Aluminium foil is made from pure aluminium; aluminium sulfide is Al2S3.
There is almost no difference in chemical properties between zirconium and hafnium metals or their compounds with the same nonmetal counterparts, because these two metals have the same valence electron configurations and almost the same atomic size.
40 protons and 40 electrons.The most stable isotope of zirconium (Zr-91) has 51 protons.
yes. some people spell aluminium, other aluminum.
The most similar element is hafnium, which is very nearly a chemical twin because the "lanthanide contraction" in elements from lanthanum to lutetium results in hafnium having almost the same atomic radius as zirconium. Other elements in the same periodic column as zirconium are titanium and rutherfordium.
No, aluminium is the same metal in all the Universe.
Zirconium and Osmium are actually both metals. Specifically transition metals. Also, metalloids and semimetals are technically the same thing. I hope this helped!