Aluminum can scratch zinc, but zinc cannot scratch aluminum.
sodium acetate and zinc phosphate
here are 17 in a random order hydrogen sodium magnesium potassium calcium iron copper zinc silver mercury aluminum carbon nitrogen oxygen sulfur chlorine lead if you know the last one please let me know
Sodium hydroxide in contact with some metals (aluminum, magnesium, and zinc) reacts to produce flammable and potentially explosive hydrogen gas.Aluminium is actually a very reactive metal that is unusual as it has layer of oxide (Al2O3) on the surface. This oxide is soluble in base forming an aluminate exposing the aluminum surface which then reacts.
Zinc- 7.14 g/mL Aluminum- 2.70 g/mL Lead- 11.34 g/mL
no... Reactivity Table: Lithium, Potassium, Sodium, Calcium, Magnesium, Aluminum, Zinc, Cadmium, Iron, Nickel, Tin, Lead, Arsenic, Antimony, Copper, Mercury, Silver Platinum, and Gold.
No. Zinc and aluminum will react though.
Aluminum can scratch zinc, but zinc cannot scratch aluminum.
Aluminum and zinc chloride when reacts, aluminum being stronger than zinc displaces it from the solution and takes its place resulting in aluminum chloride.
sodium acetate and zinc phosphate
Iron, zinc, mercury, and aluminum are pure metals commonly encountered.
sodium potassium calcium zinc iron magnesium manganese
Osmium replaced Lead Silver replaced Gold Cobalt replaced Iron Gallium replaced Mercury Zinc replaced Tin Iridium replaced Platinum In another book: Barium Calcium Plutonium Aluminum Sodium Zirconium
The only possible product would be zinc hydride. Zinc hydride is usually not prepared directly from zinc and hydrogen, but by using an even stronger reducing agent such as sodium hydride or lithium aluminum hydride. Zinc hydride is unstable and decomposes back to zinc and hydrogen over time.
Any solid metal, or a liquid with ions. Ex: Iron, copper, aluminum, zinc, gold, silver, Mercury.
coal, Mercury, and zinc
Sodium is less dense than zinc.