Pure potassium is very soft, and corrodes amazingly quickly in ordinary air.
it can be hammered into shape not its a gas for crying out loud
The molecular shape of sulfur trioxide (SO3) is trigonal planar. It consists of one sulfur atom bonded to three oxygen atoms, with the sulfur atom at the center and the oxygen atoms forming a triangle around it.
Sulfur has a number of allotropes, the best known is S8, commonly known as rhombic sulfur. There are some nice pictures about- google rhombic sulfur images.
The word you are looking for is malleability, which refers to the property of a metal that allows it to be hammered or pressed into a different shape without breaking.
Sulfur has a conchoidal fracture, resembling the curved shape of a seashell when broken. It does not have a distinct cleavage because its atomic structure does not easily allow the mineral to break along specific planes.
yes it can be hammered into place because it is a metal but non-metal can not be hammered into shape.
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.
No, sulfur would break and turn into powder.
it can be hammered into shape not its a gas for crying out loud
Yes Magnesium Can Be Hammered Into Shape !
Argon is a noble or inert gas. It is not "hammered into shape" as we understand it.
no its to stiff:D
Ductile.
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.
Metals that start with "ma" that can be hammered into a different shape include malleable metals like copper and magnesium. These metals have properties that allow them to be easily hammered or shaped without breaking.
yes
Yes, hammered copper is a physical change. When copper is hammered, its shape and size change, but its chemical composition remains the same.