Zinc sleeps around too much to be considered noble, so I'd go with Aluminum.
No. Aluminum ix pretty reactive.
Aluminum and zinc chloride when reacts, aluminum being stronger than zinc displaces it from the solution and takes its place resulting in aluminum chloride.
Non-precious metals, such as copper, aluminum, iron, nickel, zinc, tin, lead, and titanium, are common industrial materials that lack the rarity and high value of precious metals like gold and silver.
zinc magnesium aluminum iron nickel tin lead
Yes, Al is more reactive than Zn, so: 2Al + 3Zn2+ --> 2Al3+ + 3Zn (Nitrate ions are tribuned out of this reaction)
Aluminum, itself, is not an alloy. You may be referring to an aluminum alloy, which is a mix of two metals(often aluminum and steel) intended to combine their characteristics. Aluminum is one of the base metals.
Brass is an alloy of copper and zinc.
Mercury (Hg), zinc (Zn), sodium (Na) and Aluminum (Al) are called METALS
zinc and lead
An oxide
Steel, Aluminum, Zinc, Iron, Brass, & Copper
Iron, zinc, mercury, and aluminum are pure metals commonly encountered.
Copper, Gold, Silver, Aluminum, Zinc and many more.
There are many metals that are more reactive than zinc. To find out which these metals are, you can look at a reactivity series. Some examples of metals more reactive than zinc are sodium, potassium, magnesium & aluminium.
-Lead -Crome -Zinc -Copper -Aluminum -Tin (Sn)
i would say maybe aluminum, copper, bronze, zinc and tin.
depends on the process as to why you add aluminum. For zinc components, it is for strength. In galvanizing it is for providing a shiney surface. Alloys tend to be stronger and lighter than just pure metals. The ratio is critical to the process.
Aluminum can scratch zinc, but zinc cannot scratch aluminum.