Like all of the halogens, Fluorine is very much a nonmetal.
Yes, fluorine is a nonmetal. It belongs to the group of elements on the periodic table that are nonmetals, characterized by their low electrical conductivity and brittle texture.
Carbon is a nonmetal.
Bromine is a nonmetal.
H2O is neither a metal nor a nonmetal. It is a compound consisting of two nonmetal elements, hydrogen and oxygen.
Sodium chloride contains the metal sodium and the non metal chlorine.
No. Fluorine is a nonmetal.
no ionic strontium is a metal and flourine is a nonmetal
Flourine is a non-metal, more specifically a gas. Therefore, it does not exhibit the metal property of being malleable.
Yes, fluorine is a nonmetal. It belongs to the group of elements on the periodic table that are nonmetals, characterized by their low electrical conductivity and brittle texture.
Nails are metal.
Metal is metal. Nonmetal is everything else.
Is ceramic metal or nonmetal
Metal - metal compounds don't exist... Only metal-nonmetal and nonmetal-nonmetal
Tantalum is a metal.
it can be a metal or nonmetal or metalliods
nonmetal
nonmetal