Yes
Aluminium is more reactive than copper. Aluminium can react with oxygen in the air to form a protective oxide layer, while copper does not readily react with oxygen.
Aluminium is in the middle of the reactivity series of metals. It is more reactive than copper, silver, and gold, but less reactive than sodium, potassium, and calcium.
Aluminum is fairly reactive, but it forms a protective oxide layer on its surface which prevents further corrosion. It reacts with both acids and bases, as well as with air and water, but its reactivity is generally lower than that of highly reactive metals like sodium or potassium.
no becauswe the aluminum is more reactive than the zinc.
Because the Aluminium is a more reactive metal then the Iron.
Aluminum is less reactive than lithium. Aluminum forms a protective oxide layer on its surface that prevents further reaction, while lithium is highly reactive and can react violently with water or air.
Aluminum is pretty reactive, but it is nowhere near the most reactive.
no,almuminium is more reactive
Aluminium is non reactive as it forms a coating of Al2O3.
No, copper is less reactive than aluminum.
Aluminium is more reactive than copper. Aluminium can react with oxygen in the air to form a protective oxide layer, while copper does not readily react with oxygen.
Aluminium is in the middle of the reactivity series of metals. It is more reactive than copper, silver, and gold, but less reactive than sodium, potassium, and calcium.
the anit-matter version of aluminium
Aluminium (or aluminum) is a chemical element. The symbol for aluminium is Al, and its atomic number is 13. Aluminium is the most abundant metal. Aluminium is a very good conductor of electricity and heat. It is light and strong. It can be hammered into sheets (malleable) or pulled out into wires (ductile). It is a highly reactive metal, although it is corrosion resistant.
The sun is not really a conductor of heat, it is agenerator of heat (via a very large and sustained thermonuclear reaction). A conductor of heat is normally a material that allows heat to be transfered through its body; examples of good heat conductors are aluminium and copper
I don't know what you mean by "trans metal".Transition metals vary in reactivity from platinum and gold (almost inert) to zinc (pretty reactive), though less so than, say, aluminium (you may not think of aluminium as reactive, but that's because it's so reactive it instantly reacts with oxygen in the air to form a thin transparent layer of aluminium oxide, which is pretty non-reactive) or magnesium or sodium.
As aluminium is a reactive metal, it will oxidise in air to form a hard coating of aluminium oxide which surrounds the metal. To observe the reaction of sulphuric acid and aluminium, this coating must first be specially removed. Effervescence will be observed, and hydrogen gas will be produced. aluminium + sulphuric acid (reacts to form) aluminium sulphate + hydrogen gas