Al+HCl gives AlCl3+hydrogen So aluminium chloride is formed as a result.
Aluminium is generally considered as a metal, but it shows some properties of metalloid also.
This foil is also a metal.
Aluminium is a metal with low density.
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.
Neither. Aluminium is a group 13 metal or a main group metal.
When calcium metal is added to a dilute solution of hydrochloric acid, a chemical reaction takes place in which calcium reacts with hydrochloric acid to produce calcium chloride and hydrogen gas. The balanced chemical equation is: Ca (s) + 2HCl (aq) -> CaCl2 (aq) + H2 (g)
No, aluminum (Al) is a metal, not dissolvable in 'whatever kind of' water.
Aluminium is classified as a metal.
Yes, aluminium is considered a metal.
When silver metal is added to dilute sulphuric acid solution, a redox reaction takes place. The silver metal reacts with the sulfuric acid to produce silver sulfate and hydrogen gas. The reaction can be represented by the following equation: 2Ag(s) + H2SO4(aq) -> Ag2SO4(aq) + H2(g)
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.
it is a pure metal but it can be a ferrous metal.
Aluminium is amphoteric which means it react with both acids and bases. In both case Hydrogen gas is given off and the aluminum dissolves. The aluminum does actually react with the sodium hydroxide. The sodium hydroxide dissolves off the Aluminium oxide layer and then the aluminum reacts with the water. The reaction with NaOH is 2 Al +6 H20 + 2NaOH ------> 2 Na(AlOH4) + 3 H2 The Reaction with HCl is 2Al + 6 HCl ------> AlCl3 + 3 H2
Aluminium
Aluminium sulfide is an ionic compound formed between aluminium (a metal) and sulfur (a non-metal), therefore it is an ionic compound.
This foil is also a metal.