sodium is the most malleable i think dont know why tho
totally silver i know cause i do XD
Yes. of course.
copper bromide + sodium Hydroxide = Copper Hydroxide + Sodium Bromide CuBr2 + 2NaOH = Cu (OH)2 + 2NaBr
Aqueous Sodium hypochlorite is a strong oxidizer. The reaction with Copper is probably as follows: Cu + NaOCl --> CuO (s) + NaCl
Well, sodium is a metal so it could be both. [depends on phase]
I think sodium is more reactive than copper, because on the Reactivity Series list sodium is higher than copper.
sodium
Sodium is less mealliable
metals which can be drawn in to sheets are called malleable. e.g., gold
Sodium chloride- ionic solids tend to be brittle and shatter, bronze is an alloy of copper and tin and metals and alloys are malleable.
Yes. of course.
copper bromide + sodium Hydroxide = Copper Hydroxide + Sodium Bromide CuBr2 + 2NaOH = Cu (OH)2 + 2NaBr
Iron, Steel, Bronze, Copper, Silver, I believe these are all metals....
All metals are malleable. Gold and sodium are good examples.
iron
The elements like sodium and potassium are not malleable. They are soft and have low melting point.
Aqueous Sodium hypochlorite is a strong oxidizer. The reaction with Copper is probably as follows: Cu + NaOCl --> CuO (s) + NaCl
Copper chloride + Sodium hydroxide --> Copper hydroxide + sodium chloride