Even if metals can be less dense than the sugar, metals are solid and not of powder
No, sucrose is not a metal. Sucrose is a type of sugar that is commonly found in plants like sugar cane and sugar beets. It is composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms.
When you mix silver nitrate with sugar, a chemical reaction takes place that results in a black precipitate of silver metal forming. This reaction is a reducing sugar reaction, where the sugar acts as a reducing agent to convert the silver ion in silver nitrate into silver metal.
yes, some metals will rust in various ways and at different speeds. However only metals with iron in them will rust. Other metals will either oxidize or just remain the same. So the answer is partly yes, partly no. It depends what metal specifically.
Ordinary sugar is known to chemists as the sugar sucrose, which is a carbohydrate (a compound of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen). A phospate is a compound known to chemists as a salt of phosphoric acid and a metal, such as sodium, or something behaving like a metal, such as ammonium.
Only elements(the substances found in the periodic table) are classified as either metals, non-metals or metalloid. Sugar is not an element, it is a covalent compound consisting of the elements Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen. Thus, sugar cannot be classified as any of the three.
no
No, sucrose is not a metal. Sucrose is a type of sugar that is commonly found in plants like sugar cane and sugar beets. It is composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms.
Even if metals can be less dense than the sugar, metals are solid and not of powder
sugar is neither. it cannot be categorized this way because it is not an element found on the periodic table. sugar is a type of macromolecule, which is made up of atoms of elements like carbon for example (which can be found on the periodic table and categorized as a metal or non metal)
Sugar kisses
When you mix silver nitrate with sugar, a chemical reaction takes place that results in a black precipitate of silver metal forming. This reaction is a reducing sugar reaction, where the sugar acts as a reducing agent to convert the silver ion in silver nitrate into silver metal.
sugar dissolves in water bcz in soln. it splits into ions........
sodium chloride (NaCl), it is the combination of a metal and a non-metal
yes, some metals will rust in various ways and at different speeds. However only metals with iron in them will rust. Other metals will either oxidize or just remain the same. So the answer is partly yes, partly no. It depends what metal specifically.
Any reaction between sucrose and copper (as a solid metal).
This is probable an error.
No, barium itself is a metal and does not contain sugar. It is a chemical element found in the Earth's crust and is used in various industries, including medicine and science.