An element that can be hammered is called malleable.
Gold is a malleable element. Silver is another malleable element.
No, phosphorus is brittle and cannot be hammered into shape like metals. It is a non-metal element that is usually found in a solid state with a waxy appearance, and attempts to hammer it would likely result in it breaking or crumbling.
An element that is malleable belongs to the category of metals. Malleability is a characteristic of metals that allows them to be hammered or pressed into thin sheets without breaking.
Sulphur arises in 30 forms (known as allotropes). The commonest form will simply break up into a powder, like plaster, if you beat it with a hammer. Please see the link.
Malleable , malleability is the ability of a metal to be hammered into thin sheets.
Yes - depending on what you call "thin". Gold is capable of being hammered much thinner.
Gold is a malleable element. Silver is another malleable element.
No, phosphorus is brittle and cannot be hammered into shape like metals. It is a non-metal element that is usually found in a solid state with a waxy appearance, and attempts to hammer it would likely result in it breaking or crumbling.
No, carbon cannot be hammered into shapes as it is a non-metallic element. However, carbon can be combined with other materials to form composites that can be shaped and molded.
This is malleability, which is a property of metals.
Yes, if an element sample has been hammered into a sheet, it typically becomes a good conductor of heat. This is because the process of hammering aligns the atoms and reduces the internal resistance, allowing heat to flow more easily through the material.
Yes - depending on what you call "thin". Gold is capable of being hammered much thinner.
yes it can be hammered into place because it is a metal but non-metal can not be hammered into shape.
An element that is malleable belongs to the category of metals. Malleability is a characteristic of metals that allows them to be hammered or pressed into thin sheets without breaking.
Hammered is a verb in that sentence.
No, helium cannot be hammered into sheets. Helium is the only element that cannot be cooled sufficiently to become a solid. It remains liquid at the lowest temperatures we can achieve, and that's very, very close to absolute zero. As helium is a gas or a liquid and never a solid (at least not yet) we don't see it treated as a solid, like being hammered into sheets.
Its quite simple, three ways are that they conduct heat andelectricity are a malleable which means the ability of a substance to be hammered into shape!