Tungsten is a metal.
Tungsten is a metal. It is a transition metal located in the periodic table's d-block. It is known for its high melting point and is commonly used in applications requiring high temperature resistance, such as in light bulb filaments and electrical contacts.
No. Tungsten is an element, where as tungsten carbide is an alloy, or a mixture of elements (tungsten, nickel, tantalum, niobium, titanium, and chromium). Tungsten carbide is much easier to work into styles and designs, but does not change the hardness of the metal.
The chemical symbol for Tungsten is W. (Tungsten is also known as Wolfram.)
Tungsten is found in wolframite (hence why the Germans called tungsten wolfram).
There are none, tungsten is a pure element so it is made of only tungsten.
Tungsten is a metal with an atomic number of 74. In 1783, two brothers named Fausto and Juan Jose de Elhuyar discovered this metal in Spain. The chemical symbol for tungsten is W.
Tungsten is a metal. It is a transition metal located in the periodic table's d-block. It is known for its high melting point and is commonly used in applications requiring high temperature resistance, such as in light bulb filaments and electrical contacts.
It is a metalloid. It is in the p block.
No, Al is not a metalloid.
Boron is a metalloid
Germanium is a metalloid.
silocon is a metalloid!! :)
Yes. Tellurium is a metalloid.
metalloid
Yes, Sulfer is a metalloid.
metalloid
metalloid