The property missing from aluminum to make it a normal metal is ferromagnetism. Aluminum is not ferromagnetic because it does not have unpaired electrons in its outer shell that align in a magnetic field, unlike iron, nickel, and cobalt which exhibit ferromagnetic properties. Aluminum is a non-magnetic metal due to its stable electron configuration and lack of magnetic moments.
Gasoline has various chemical properties (particularly, it burns very well) and its combustion products have other chemical properties (they don't burn as well) but it would not be correct to say that gasoline in any sense BECOMES a chemical property. Chemicals have properties, they don't become properties.
Many metals cannot be picked up by electromagnets (at room temperature). For instance, aluminum, gold, mercury, and copper will not be attracted to an electromagnet. Iron sticks to an electromagnet at normal temperatures. If iron is too hot, it loses its magnetic abilities. This is true of all metals: if they're cold enough they exhibit magnetic properties, if they're too hot they don't show magnetic properties. Even mercury (liquid at room temperature) can be made magnetic if it's cooled to very low temperatures.
A physical property of solids is that they have a fixed shape and volume at normal temperatures and pressures. They also have a definite melting point, meaning they transition to a liquid state at a specific temperature.
It raises the boiling point and the freezing point of water than normal.
Colligative properties of matter occur as a consequence of the laws of thermodynamics governing the mixture of substances. The presence of more than one component in a mixture alters the physical properties relative to either component in its pure state by increasing the entropy.
Physical properties are characteristics of a substance that can be observed and measured without changing its chemical composition. These properties include density, color, hardness, and others like melting point, boiling point, and solubility. Physical properties help identify and classify substances based on their observable traits.
Aluminum is solid at room temperature
Under normal circumstances, aluminum does not react with water.
Aluminum, like all other elements, comes in a variety of isotopes, and that is normal.
Gasoline has various chemical properties (particularly, it burns very well) and its combustion products have other chemical properties (they don't burn as well) but it would not be correct to say that gasoline in any sense BECOMES a chemical property. Chemicals have properties, they don't become properties.
No, aluminum does not react with nitrogen under normal conditions. Aluminum is a relatively unreactive metal and does not form compounds with nitrogen easily.
Aluminum can corrode under normal conditions, but the rate of corrosion can vary depending on factors such as exposure to moisture and other environmental factors. In general, it can take several years for aluminum to show signs of corrosion under normal conditions.
"It is discrete" is not a property.
At room temperature and pressure Aluminium is a solid.
It is normal; each compound has specific properties.
It is a normal curve with mean = 0 and variance = 1.
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