Aluminium, this is the correct answer if you are completing the AQA Science homework sheet. If not, titanium is also a low density metal and is extracted by electrolysis.
Low Density a Metal?NO!!!!
Metals like gold and silver can be extracted from their ores by heat alone. This is because these metals have relatively low melting points and can be separated from their ores through processes like smelting or cupellation where the ore is heated to high temperatures to extract the metal.
Magnesium is a low-density metal commonly used in safety flares and alloys due to its flammability and strength-to-weight ratio.
Aluminium is a metal with low density.
The 1st group elements i.e. Lithium,Sodium, Potassium, Rubidium, Cesium and Francium are all low density metals and they react violently with water.
Low Density a Metal?NO!!!!
Low Density a Metal?NO!!!!
The concentration of tin sulphate solution does not change during electrolysis because the tin ions are deposited onto the cathode to form solid tin metal, while the sulfate ions remain in the solution. This maintains a constant concentration of tin ions in solution.
Metals like gold and silver can be extracted from their ores by heat alone. This is because these metals have relatively low melting points and can be separated from their ores through processes like smelting or cupellation where the ore is heated to high temperatures to extract the metal.
aluminium
Iron is a dense metal, not low density. Its density is around 7.87 g/cm³ at room temperature.
Magnesium is a low-density metal commonly used in safety flares and alloys due to its flammability and strength-to-weight ratio.
you can say it has a low density
it has a low density
You think to lithium (Li).
Aluminium is a metal with low density.
Magnesium has a very low electronegativity, or in other words, as metals go it is very metallic. In order to displace it in a compound by another metal, you would need a metal with a significantly lower electronegativity, and that is not easy. It is easier to use electrolysis.