We should not put a stain less steel spoon in a pickle jar because it reacts with the ACIDS in the pickles .It does not react quickly so we can use it but we should not put it in the jar for long time
spoon,fork,
Some are metal, some are plastic, and some are wooden.
No; steel is an iron-carbon alloy. Stainless steel is an alloy of steel with chromium added. Stainless steel is usually 13-25% chromium (by weight).
Stainless steel.
To the extent that stainless steel contains minerals they would be there in extremely small amounts. Stainless steel is produced in such a way as to control its content. However, stainless steel may contain any of a number of other elements besides iron such as chrome, carbon, vanadium, tungsten and so on, depending on the purpose for which the steel is intended. The stainless steels used for cutlery vary widely. In our cutlery drawer we have two varieties, one that is relatively easy to bend and shiny with a bluish colour, the other much harder to bend and dull grey. My point is that the extra elements in any given stainless steel spoon could be any of a variety of possibilities. Please see the link.
We should not put a stain less steel spoon in a pickle jar because it reacts with the ACIDS in the pickles .It does not react quickly so we can use it but we should not put it in the jar for long time
spoon,fork,
forging...
Usually steel.
Stainless steel is ferrous, you can pick it up with a magnet, also it won't tarnish like silver, unless it's a plated silver spoon, if there is such a thing.
No. A metal spoon is most likely made out of stainless steel, which is a complex group of elements.
look at it
There are many possibilities:steelplasticsilver plated brass (my mom had a set of these)silvergoldwoodglassporcelaincopperpewterwrought ironmarbleetc.
because it is stainless steel? idiot ?
because it contains steel and particle go in with your liquid
It is a stainless steel ladle and it used to evaporate a small amount of solution
No, stainless steel is a homogeneous mixture of iron and chromium.YES, actually, stainless steel is a compound, because compounds are HOMOGENEOUS forms of matter. If it were a mixture, by definition, it would be a HETEROGENEOUS form of matter.