Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
No. Metals liberate hydrogen gas from acids.
neither. it is a noble gas
Oxygen (O2) is the gas.
Transition metals such as copper, silver, and gold can form ions with a noble gas electron configuration. This occurs when they lose electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration similar to the nearest noble gas.
Only some metals; an example is aluminium.
No. Metals liberate hydrogen gas from acids.
i have a raburn gas cooker can i convert it from town gas to lpg
Acids can react with metals to produce hydrogen gas, not oxygen. When acids react with metals, they displace hydrogen gas from the acid.
When metals react with dilute acids, hydrogen gas is evolved. This is because metals displace hydrogen from the acid, resulting in the formation of metal salts and hydrogen gas as a byproduct. The reaction can be represented as metal + acid → metal salt + hydrogen gas.
Electrons in metals are delocalized and in a free movement.
neither. it is a noble gas
Metals react with acids to produce a salt and hydrogen gas.
Oxygen (O2) is the gas.
To convert NO2- to N2, a reducing agent would be needed to add electrons to the nitrogen atom, reducing it to form nitrogen gas (N2). Common reducing agents include metals like zinc or hydrogen gas.
Several gasses can react with metals, but due to the fact that you are asking for a single gas, the most likely answer that you will be looking for is Oxygen. Oxygen reacts with many metals (and non-metals).
When metals are put in hydrochloric acid, hydrogen gas is produced as the metal reacts with the acid to form metal chloride and hydrogen gas as a byproduct.
metals as in elements. or like zinc. or something. from my knowledge, magnets, other metals (sometimes), gas, && liquid.