Potassium.
Metallic.
Potassium
Magnesium is an element, a metal. It is silvery grey in colour and has lustre.whereas Magnesium Oxide is a compound made from reaction of magnesium and oxygen. It is a powdery substance and is white in colour
Yes. Potassium on its own is a soft, highly reactive metallic element that can form a variety of ionic compounds with. Potassium sorbate is one of them, a compound of potassium, carbon, hydrogen., and oxygen. It is much more stable the elemental potassium. Its is commonly used as a preservative.
The element in Period 3 that has the greatest metallic character is magnesium. In periods, the metallic character decreases when atomic number increases.
They are both metal...the more metallic looking of the two is silver
Sn (tin), which is a metal, is more metallic than Sb (antimony), which is a metalloid.
Magnesium is an element, a metal. It is silvery grey in colour and has lustre.whereas Magnesium Oxide is a compound made from reaction of magnesium and oxygen. It is a powdery substance and is white in colour
No, magnesium is an element and therefore a pure substance.
Answer: iron, aluminium, sodium, potassium, uranium, magnesium, copper, gold, calcium, silver etc.
Magnesium
Sodium is more reactive then Magnesium as it is a group 1 element and magnesium is a group 2 element
Yes. Potassium on its own is a soft, highly reactive metallic element that can form a variety of ionic compounds with. Potassium sorbate is one of them, a compound of potassium, carbon, hydrogen., and oxygen. It is much more stable the elemental potassium. Its is commonly used as a preservative.
The element in Period 3 that has the greatest metallic character is magnesium. In periods, the metallic character decreases when atomic number increases.
No element contains more than one element.
They are both metal...the more metallic looking of the two is silver
magnesium.
Potassium is a METAL. These distinctions are quite arbitrary, as all elements have more or less metallic character - there are no "true" metals or non-metals (we call the ones we can't decide on "metalloids") Potassium has a very high metallic character .
Sn (tin), which is a metal, is more metallic than Sb (antimony), which is a metalloid.