No. Iron (Fe = ferrous), is a totally different element.
Because they have different magnetic properties; iron is strongly ferromagnetic.
Aluminium is generally considered as a metal, but it shows some properties of metalloid also.
Aluminium is a metal with low density.
This foil is also a metal.
Aluminium is a metal (an element), not an alloy. This means that it's only made up of aluminium atoms. It has no other impurities in it. Aluminium ore is called bauxite. This has aluminium plus other substances in it, but aluminium on its own is a metal with just aluminium atoms in it.
Because they have different magnetic properties; iron is strongly ferromagnetic.
Really powerful magnets are alloys or in some cases not even metals (they're minerals like metal oxides). Iron is one of the better "pure" metals.In alloy or oxide magnets, the metals themselves don't even have to be ferromagnetic; an alloy of aluminium, cobalt, and iron was discovered in 1931 to make far better magnets than iron itself did, even though aluminium is not ferromagnetic at all.
Aluminium is classified as a metal.
Yes, aluminium is considered a metal.
Really powerful magnets are alloys or in some cases not even metals (they're minerals like metal oxides). Iron is one of the better "pure" metals.In alloy or oxide magnets, the metals themselves don't even have to be ferromagnetic; an alloy of aluminium, cobalt, and iron was discovered in 1931 to make far better magnets than iron itself did, even though aluminium is not ferromagnetic at all.
Most metals. eg Aluminium, copper, tin, uranium
No, silver is not ferromagnetic. It is classified as a non-magnetic metal because it does not have strong magnetic properties like ferromagnetic materials such as iron, nickel, and cobalt.
ferromagnetic materials
Aluminium is generally considered as a metal, but it shows some properties of metalloid also.
Aluminium chloride forms covalent bonds because it is composed of a metal (aluminium) and a non-metal (chlorine), leading to sharing of electrons. Aluminium oxide is ionic because it is composed of a metal (aluminium) and a non-metal (oxygen), resulting in the transfer of electrons from the metal to the non-metal, creating positively and negatively charged ions that are held together by electrostatic forces.
No, platinum is not ferromagnetic. It is a non-magnetic metal that belongs to the group of transition metals.
it is a pure metal but it can be a ferrous metal.