every metal is priced based on scarcity, and ease of access. there's a lot more iron than aluminum in the ground... and aluminum's properties and usage for current products make it more expensive. it also cools very quickly, while still being lightweight and durable... making it very useful.
The iron chunk will be denser and heavier than the aluminum chunk due to the higher density of iron compared to aluminum. Iron is also more susceptible to corrosion compared to aluminum.
No, aluminum is not stronger than iron, infact iron is stronger. We can also find it from the reactivity series table.
Iron is approximately 2.7 times heavier than aluminum. This is due to the difference in their atomic weights - iron has an atomic weight of 55.85 g/mol, while aluminum has an atomic weight of 26.98 g/mol.
Aluminum is actually lighter than titanium
An aluminum spoon would become hotter because aluminum is a better conductor of heat than iron. This means that the heat from the food being served would transfer more quickly through the aluminum spoon, making it feel hotter to the touch compared to an iron spoon.
Aluminum is not used as the reducing agent in iron extraction because it has a higher reduction potential than iron, meaning it is not able to reduce iron oxide to elemental iron. Carbon, on the other hand, has a lower reduction potential than iron and is commonly used as the reducing agent in the extraction of iron.
aluminum is more durable than iron.
IRON STRONGER.....ALUMINUM LIGHTER.....IRON IS HEAVY.....ALUMINUM WILL BREAK EASIER THAN IRON
The price difference between aluminum outdoor furniture and cast iron is very significat. Aluminum can be hundreds of dollars cheaper.
Iron would not react with aluminum nitrate because iron is less reactive than aluminum and would not displace aluminum from its compound.
Aluminum is more reactive than iron, meaning it can displace iron in a chemical reaction. In practical terms, this means aluminum will react with certain substances that iron will not.
Compared to what? It's cheaper than steel, or aluminum, and so far it's cheaper than plastic.
The iron chunk will be denser and heavier than the aluminum chunk due to the higher density of iron compared to aluminum. Iron is also more susceptible to corrosion compared to aluminum.
Yes.
Aluminum has about 1/3 the density of iron, therefore a given volume of aluminum would weigh about 1/3 as much as the same amount of iron. So no, aluminum is not heavier than iron; far from it.
Iron does not typically react with aluminum sulfate because iron is less reactive than aluminum. The sulfate ion can form soluble compounds with both iron and aluminum ions, so there may be some precipitation if both iron and aluminum salts are present in the solution.
Iron has a higher density than aluminum