Most probably 'None'.
Aluminium and steel cans can be separated using a magnet, as steel is magnetic while aluminium is not. By running a magnet over a pile of cans, the steel cans will be attracted to the magnet while the aluminium cans will not, allowing for easy separation.
The product of aluminium hydroxide and oxalic acid is aluminium oxalate, while the product of aluminium oxalate and potassium oxalate is potassium oxalate and aluminium oxalate.
Aluminium oxide has two elements: aluminium and oxygen.
The word equation for aluminium reacting with water is: aluminium + water → aluminium hydroxide + hydrogen gas.
Aluminium is classified as a metal.
copper, zinc, Aluminium and others.
You can do this using a magnet. Iron is ferrous, therefore attracted to magnets, whereas aluminium is non-ferrous and is not attracted to magnets.
Aluminium is not attracted by a magnet, due to the molecular structures that it forms. Metals which can be readily attracted include iron, cobalt, and nickel, although compounds of these will demonstrate significant differences in magnetism.
Yes, but not very. Aluminium is paramagnetic, meaning it is very weakly attracted to a magnet. (Materials like iron that are strongly attracted to magnets are called ferromagnetic.)The attraction between aluminium and a magnetic field is small enough that sensitive instrumentation is required to detect it. For all practical purposes, unless you're a scientist aluminium can be considered non-magnetic.
Neither. Aluminum Foil has no magnetic properties.
Aluminium and steel cans can be separated using a magnet, as steel is magnetic while aluminium is not. By running a magnet over a pile of cans, the steel cans will be attracted to the magnet while the aluminium cans will not, allowing for easy separation.
yes.......! i guess its yes because aluminum is a metal and all the metals are attracted by magnets so hence aluminum get attracted to metals...!
Aluminium is formed at the cathode because the Al ions (Al3+) within the electrolyte are attracted to form aluminium metal by gaining 3 electrons. The metal is molten due to the high temperature of the cells. Hope this helps
No. Carbonates are an exception to the rule of carbon compounds being organic.
micro-organisms in the get attracted to the food and spoils it for us
Aluminium is not a metal, it is a metalloid. Magnets only attract to three major metal elements at room temperature: nickel, iron, and cobalt.
Aluminium is actually an element, so the only element in aluminium is aluminium.