Yes. Atoms of two different elements are always different.
Al(OH)3 One atom of aluminum. Three atoms of oxygen. Three atoms of hydrogen.
As an element, silver has several isotopes (with different numbers of neutrons) but all atoms of an isotope will be identical, i.e. all atoms of the isotope 107Ag will be equivalent (look the same), all atoms of 109Ag will be equivalent - but atoms of 107Ag will be different from atoms of 109Ag. To the naked eye, there is no difference in the appearance of ordinary silver (silver-107 or silver-109) and that of its synthetic radioactive isotopes (mainly silver-105, 106, 108, 111).
There are 4 atoms of aluminum in 2Al2O3.
The formula unit for aluminum oxide is usually considered to be Al2O3 (even though the bonding may vary in different allotropes). Using this formula unit, each one contains 5 total atoms, found by adding all the subscripts in the formula.
Bulk aluminum is usually a silver color. (Think aluminum foil.)
aluminum has a silver colour attributed to the metallic bond by which its atoms bond together
Al(OH)3 One atom of aluminum. Three atoms of oxygen. Three atoms of hydrogen.
Gold & Silver are different because they have different numbers of protons and electrons in their atoms.
No, pure silver consists of silver atoms arranged in a crystalline structure. However, there may be impurities present in the form of different atoms or compounds depending on the purity level of the silver.
Aluminum carbide contains two different kinds of atoms: aluminum and carbon. The formula unit or molecular formula for aluminum carbide is Al4C3.
yes, all aluminum atoms have the same number of protons. The number of protons in an atom give it its identity. Isotopes are different atoms of the same element with the same number of protons, but a different number of neutrons.
Aluminum is an element. It is made entirely of aluminum atoms.
Zero.. Aluminum is aluminum and nitrogen is nitrogen.
As an element, silver has several isotopes (with different numbers of neutrons) but all atoms of an isotope will be identical, i.e. all atoms of the isotope 107Ag will be equivalent (look the same), all atoms of 109Ag will be equivalent - but atoms of 107Ag will be different from atoms of 109Ag. To the naked eye, there is no difference in the appearance of ordinary silver (silver-107 or silver-109) and that of its synthetic radioactive isotopes (mainly silver-105, 106, 108, 111).
2 aluminum atoms 4 sulphur atoms 4 oxygen atoms
AlCl3 1 Aluminium to 3 Chlorine atoms 1:3
No. 100 lead atoms are several times heavier than 100 aluminum atoms.