Some are good conductors of electric current.
Elements that have properties of both metals and nonmetals are classified as metalloids. Metalloids have properties that are intermediate between metals and nonmetals, such as being able to conduct electricity but not as effectively as metals. Examples of metalloids include silicon and arsenic.
i believe it is metalloids
Elements that exhibit properties similar to both metals and nonmetals are called metalloids. Common examples include silicon, germanium, and arsenic. Metalloids typically have a metallic luster, are semiconductors of electricity, and can be brittle like nonmetals. Their unique properties make them valuable in various applications, particularly in electronics and materials science.
The three main categories of elements on the periodic table are metals, metalloids, and nonmetals.
There are 17 nonmetals and only 6 metalloids.
because metalloids usually have properties that are similar to metals and nonmetals
Metalloids have some properties similar to properties of non metals; metalloids have bad thermal and electrical conductivity, they are brittle, soft etc.
Elements that have properties of both metals and nonmetals are classified as metalloids. Metalloids have properties that are intermediate between metals and nonmetals, such as being able to conduct electricity but not as effectively as metals. Examples of metalloids include silicon and arsenic.
i believe it is metalloids
Metalloids are the class of elements that have properties of both metals and nonmetals. They have characteristics of both, such as being semi-conductive like nonmetals and having metallic luster like metals. Examples of metalloids include silicon, germanium, and arsenic.
metalloids
Those elements are called metalloids. They have properties that are intermediate between metals and nonmetals.
The three classes of elements are metals, nonmetals, and metalloids. Metals are typically shiny, solid at room temperature, and good conductors of heat and electricity. Nonmetals are usually dull in appearance, brittle, and poor conductors of heat and electricity. Metalloids have properties that are intermediate between metals and nonmetals.
Because they are neither metals nor non-metals
Boron, Silicon, Arsenic, Tellurium, Astaline. This is also called the "Magic Stairs"
The three major groups of elements on the periodic table are metals, nonmetals, and metalloids. Metals are typically shiny, conduct heat and electricity well, while nonmetals are usually dull, poor conductors, and can be gases. Metalloids share properties of both metals and nonmetals.
The stair-step pattern has metalloids on both sides, that is, such elements which possess properties similar to both metals and non-metals.