Nope. They are gasses.
oxygen and carbon
Non-metals tend to react with oxygen to form oxides when heated. The reaction can be violent or slow, depending on the element. For example, carbon reacts with oxygen to form carbon dioxide, sulfur reacts to form sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen reacts to form nitrogen oxides.
Metals include: lead, gold, silver, calcium, magnesium, uranium. Non-metals include: carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, helium.
The element with properties similar to both metals and nonmetals and one less proton than carbon is boron. Boron is a metalloid that displays characteristics of both metals and nonmetals due to its position in the periodic table.
Yes water and carbon dioxide are both compounds and when they react together they form another compound.
Both are non-metals.
Carbon monoxide - CO Covalent bonds are between non-metals only. Ionic bonds are between non-metals and metals. Carbon and oxygen are both non-metals; therefore, carbon monoxide is covalently bonded.
Carbon Dioxide is a compound formed by a Carbon and Oxygen. Only an element can be classified as a metal, non-metal or a metalloid. Compounds cannot be classified in these categories. Carbon and oxygen both are non-metals.
Actually none of the options given above are true for carbon dioxide. Though carbon and oxygen are both non-metals, carbon dioxide is considered as a compound.
NO!!! The word 'monoxide' indicates that a substance, NOT an element, has one(1) oxygen in its formula. e.g. Carbon monoxide (CO) or Nitrogen monoxide (NO)
oxygen and carbon
Oxygen can form a compound with many elements, both metal and non-metals: * magnesium ------> MgO * copper -----> CuO * hydrogen -------> H2O * carbon ------> CO2
Yes Carbon and Oxygen form carbon dioxide, whenone molecule of oxygen combines with a single atom of carbon.Actually, oxygen is a diatomic element, an element usually found bonded with another one (O2), making it be 2 atoms of oxygen combining with 1 atom of carbon. And also the prefix di- represents 2 atoms of oxygen. This has to do with non metals bonding with non-metals (covalent bonds).
The non-metals carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen are the basis of all life on the planet.
Both carbon (or a carbon compound) and oxygen are used in the formation of carbon dioxide, which contains both elements.
Neither carbon nor nitrogen are metalloids. They are both non-metals.
Carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen are all nonmetal elements.