when copper and zinc are heated, they create brass :)
Alloys that contain only copper and zinc are usually called "brass"; there are also some alloys that contain one or more other metals in addition to copper and zinc, and these usually have another name.
Bronze is usually made up of copper (about 90%) and tin (about 10%) Brass is usually made up of copper and zinc. Some alloys are called bronze when they are actually brass, such as "commercial bronze" which is made from copper and zinc. Other metals may also be added, but if the main addition is tin, it's a bronze, and if the main addition is zinc, it's a brass.
Copper, Gold, Silver, Aluminum, Zinc and many more.
Copper. Mixed with tin, it becomes bronze, and mixed with zinc, brass. You can see this for yourself by taking a shiny U.S. penny from 1984 or newer. Hold it in a flame (even a candle will do) and wait for a color change. Modern pennies are zinc with a little copper, so when heated, it becomes brass.
-Lead -Crome -Zinc -Copper -Aluminum -Tin (Sn)
Zinc and copper are solid metals.
When zinc and copper are heated together brass is formed, most people would think that this is a chemical change. But this is a common misconception. Brass is an alloy, a mixture of metals. There aren't brass molecules. This is a physical change because no new substance is formed, the copper and zinc just mix around.
Zinc and Copper Copper and zinc make up the mixture (alloy) brass.
Magnesium, zinc and copper are metals. Phosphorous is a metalloid.
zinc/steel zinc/copper copper/steel
Brass (copper and zinc) Bronze (copper and tin) Gunmetal (copper, tin, and zinc)
copper and zinc
Brass
zinc. It's a lot less valuable than copper.
They form magnesium oxide, copper oxide etc. and will form carbon dioxide as a byproduct.
Zinc becomes plated with copper.
Bronze is an alloy of 90% copper, and 10% tin.Brass may have a wide range of different contributory metals which confer different properties on the alloy.