What is the Solubility and Malleability of Antimony?
Q. What is the Solubility and Malleability of Antimony?
Asked by michael_sirh - Mon Oct 26 13:40:17 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. find on wikipedia
Answered by Dr.A - Fri Oct 30 13:42:04 2009
Q. What is the Solubility and Malleability of Antimony?
Asked by michael_sirh - Mon Oct 26 13:40:17 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. find on wikipedia
Answered by Dr.A - Fri Oct 30 13:42:04 2009
What materials possess the physical property of matter called porosity and malleability?
Q. And what does these two properties can be used in some situations?
Asked by Bruce Wade - Mon Oct 5 09:39:28 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The most malleable material is gold. And then you have lead, tin, copper, aluminum. For porosity, you have coal, charcoal, limestone, wood, sand paper, sand. Malleable materials can be hammered into thin sheets. Porous materials are used to absorb chemicals and gases. While rough porous materials are used as abrasives.
Answered by Questor - Mon Oct 5 09:47:37 2009
Q. And what does these two properties can be used in some situations?
Asked by Bruce Wade - Mon Oct 5 09:39:28 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The most malleable material is gold. And then you have lead, tin, copper, aluminum. For porosity, you have coal, charcoal, limestone, wood, sand paper, sand. Malleable materials can be hammered into thin sheets. Porous materials are used to absorb chemicals and gases. While rough porous materials are used as abrasives.
Answered by Questor - Mon Oct 5 09:47:37 2009
What is the ductility, malleability, reflectivity, and hardness of Iodine?
Q. Also does anyone know the radioactivity or forms of oxide or what it reacts with. It would be a great help if someone could answer.
Asked by bekacc - Sat Nov 28 12:10:59 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. I doubt if you'll find information on the ductility and malleability of Iodine as it is a typical non-metal and therefore non-ductile and not malleable. Because the crystals of iodine are shiny, it clearly does have some reflectivity. Not real hardness, again it is not a metal: they have that property. Also see www.webelements.com/iodin e/ and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iod ine#Iodine_compounds
Answered by Colin - Sat Nov 28 12:40:49 2009
Q. Also does anyone know the radioactivity or forms of oxide or what it reacts with. It would be a great help if someone could answer.
Asked by bekacc - Sat Nov 28 12:10:59 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. I doubt if you'll find information on the ductility and malleability of Iodine as it is a typical non-metal and therefore non-ductile and not malleable. Because the crystals of iodine are shiny, it clearly does have some reflectivity. Not real hardness, again it is not a metal: they have that property. Also see www.webelements.com/iodin e/ and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iod ine#Iodine_compounds
Answered by Colin - Sat Nov 28 12:40:49 2009
Why can alloying change the malleability and ductility of a metal?
Q. Please answer in much detail as possible. And as soon as possible!! Thanks!
Asked by cool gal 2 - Tue Apr 21 00:00:12 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. To understand this you must know what is alloy and what happens. Alloy is a mixture of elements . It is where different metals are melted and mixed together. BEFORE it is alloyed the atoms look like this:- ooo ooo ooo ooo they can easily slide over each other when a force is applied because of the arrangement of their atoms and cause of their free electrons. This is why they can be hammered easily into shapes and can be easily drawn into wires . but this is what happens when is it alloyed :- oooOoOo OoooOOo ooOoooO OOoooOo As you can see, the atoms from the other metal has mixed with is . So, it cannot slide easily as it did before . They are much stronger and it is much harder to hammer them into shape and drawn then into wires . … [cont.]
Answered by Jenny - Tue Apr 21 04:01:45 2009
Q. Please answer in much detail as possible. And as soon as possible!! Thanks!
Asked by cool gal 2 - Tue Apr 21 00:00:12 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. To understand this you must know what is alloy and what happens. Alloy is a mixture of elements . It is where different metals are melted and mixed together. BEFORE it is alloyed the atoms look like this:- ooo ooo ooo ooo they can easily slide over each other when a force is applied because of the arrangement of their atoms and cause of their free electrons. This is why they can be hammered easily into shapes and can be easily drawn into wires . but this is what happens when is it alloyed :- oooOoOo OoooOOo ooOoooO OOoooOo As you can see, the atoms from the other metal has mixed with is . So, it cannot slide easily as it did before . They are much stronger and it is much harder to hammer them into shape and drawn then into wires . … [cont.]
Answered by Jenny - Tue Apr 21 04:01:45 2009
What is the Solubility, Malleability, Flammability, Reactivity of Antimony?
Q. Also does Antimony conduct heat and electricity? What does it taste and smell like?
Asked by michael_sirh - Mon Oct 26 14:03:18 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. Also does Antimony conduct heat and electricity? What does it taste and smell like?
Asked by michael_sirh - Mon Oct 26 14:03:18 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
what's the difference between malleability and ductility?
Q. It's definition in chemistry.
Asked by unknown - Sun Jan 17 08:20:11 2010 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Malleability is the ability of a metal to be hammered into thin flat sheets. An example of a very malleable metal is gold. Ductility is the ability of a metal to be drawn into a long thin wire. Examples of ductile metals include copper and silver. Hope this helps answer your question.
Answered by Reginald - Sun Jan 17 08:25:11 2010
Q. It's definition in chemistry.
Asked by unknown - Sun Jan 17 08:20:11 2010 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Malleability is the ability of a metal to be hammered into thin flat sheets. An example of a very malleable metal is gold. Ductility is the ability of a metal to be drawn into a long thin wire. Examples of ductile metals include copper and silver. Hope this helps answer your question.
Answered by Reginald - Sun Jan 17 08:25:11 2010
How good are potassium and magnesium at conducting heat and electricity, malleability and hardness?
Q. How good are potassium and magnesium at conducting heat and electricity, malleability and hardness?
Asked by zizou!! - Wed Jan 16 18:11:31 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. highly malleable, extremely soft, extremely reactive elements. conduct electricity well until oxydization occurs which is within moments...
Answered by Mitte Esterill - Wed Jan 16 18:14:36 2008
Q. How good are potassium and magnesium at conducting heat and electricity, malleability and hardness?
Asked by zizou!! - Wed Jan 16 18:11:31 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. highly malleable, extremely soft, extremely reactive elements. conduct electricity well until oxydization occurs which is within moments...
Answered by Mitte Esterill - Wed Jan 16 18:14:36 2008
What type of material shows malleability and ductility?
Q. What type of material shows malleability and ductility?
Asked by Sara C - Fri Dec 12 20:06:59 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. What type of material shows malleability and ductility?
Asked by Sara C - Fri Dec 12 20:06:59 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
What exactly is malleability?
Q. I mean, like the malleability of a metal.
Asked by __A_YAHOO_USER__ - Mon Jan 25 22:20:44 2010 - - 12 Answers - 0 Comments
A. the property of being physically malleable; the property of something that can be worked or hammered or shaped without breaking
Answered by Pauly - Mon Jan 25 22:27:07 2010
Q. I mean, like the malleability of a metal.
Asked by __A_YAHOO_USER__ - Mon Jan 25 22:20:44 2010 - - 12 Answers - 0 Comments
A. the property of being physically malleable; the property of something that can be worked or hammered or shaped without breaking
Answered by Pauly - Mon Jan 25 22:27:07 2010
For my grade 9 science homework i have to write meaning and sample description of colour,lustre,malleabilit y?
Q. What should i do?
Asked by Pranavan - Sat Feb 13 09:51:48 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. What should i do?
Asked by Pranavan - Sat Feb 13 09:51:48 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
What is malleability a characteristic of?
Q. What is malleability a characteristic of?
Asked by Stace K - Mon Dec 3 18:50:53 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. a metal and some metaloids
Answered by Daniel_A_893 - Mon Dec 3 18:53:31 2007
Q. What is malleability a characteristic of?
Asked by Stace K - Mon Dec 3 18:50:53 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. a metal and some metaloids
Answered by Daniel_A_893 - Mon Dec 3 18:53:31 2007
On malleability of metals, how do dislocations make a metal malleable?
Q. On malleability of metals, how do dislocations make a metal malleable?
Asked by Pete - Thu May 7 08:01:15 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. This is difficult question to answer via text. I'd suggest finding a materials science text and looking at the pictorials of a lattice with a dislocation to understand visually. The dislocations are imperfections in the crystal structure of a metal. If the crystal was perfect with no dislocations or other defects you'd have to break tons of bonds to get the metal to deform. If you have a couple of flaws to start with this allows chunks of the lattice to be displaced easily. Think of pulling apart a zipper. If it's fully zipped it won't pull apart. If you start it out a little bit, it'll come right apart. the dislocations help to shift the atoms around during working and offer a starting point for material movement by allowing… [cont.]
Answered by memarcus - Thu May 7 09:22:02 2009
Q. On malleability of metals, how do dislocations make a metal malleable?
Asked by Pete - Thu May 7 08:01:15 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. This is difficult question to answer via text. I'd suggest finding a materials science text and looking at the pictorials of a lattice with a dislocation to understand visually. The dislocations are imperfections in the crystal structure of a metal. If the crystal was perfect with no dislocations or other defects you'd have to break tons of bonds to get the metal to deform. If you have a couple of flaws to start with this allows chunks of the lattice to be displaced easily. Think of pulling apart a zipper. If it's fully zipped it won't pull apart. If you start it out a little bit, it'll come right apart. the dislocations help to shift the atoms around during working and offer a starting point for material movement by allowing… [cont.]
Answered by memarcus - Thu May 7 09:22:02 2009
What is Malleability and Ductility in metals?
Q. What is Malleability and Ductility in metals?
Asked by himamalampati - Tue Dec 9 06:36:07 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Malleability means beaten into sheet and ductility means drawn into wires. These properties are due to the non- directional nature of the metallic bond. When any force is applied on the metal the position of kernels is changed without destroying the crystal. The metallic lattice gets deformed due to the slippage of the adjacent layers of the kernels from one part to another. It doesn t change the environment of the kernels. It simply moves the kernel from one lattice to another.
Answered by Kevin D - Tue Dec 9 07:12:22 2008
Q. What is Malleability and Ductility in metals?
Asked by himamalampati - Tue Dec 9 06:36:07 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Malleability means beaten into sheet and ductility means drawn into wires. These properties are due to the non- directional nature of the metallic bond. When any force is applied on the metal the position of kernels is changed without destroying the crystal. The metallic lattice gets deformed due to the slippage of the adjacent layers of the kernels from one part to another. It doesn t change the environment of the kernels. It simply moves the kernel from one lattice to another.
Answered by Kevin D - Tue Dec 9 07:12:22 2008
What are products that are manufactured because of the malleability of their materials. and ductility?
Q. What are products that are manufactured because of the malleability of their materials. and ductility?
Asked by Jolin J. - Sun Jan 11 01:55:28 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. This refers to the ability of a metal to plastically deform without breaking or fracturing, with the cohesion between the molecules remaining sufficient to hold them together (see adhesion and cohesion). Ductility is important in wire drawing and sheet stamping. The metal must neither break nor be scraped off during these processes. Platinum, steel, copper, and tungsten have high ductility. Ductility is the study of how materials deform and flow in response to force. (Columbia Encyclopedia) I pasted a list of metals and alloys that fit this criteria as well as examples of many products. I hope this helps you. Aluminum and aluminum alloys are lightweight, non-ferrous metals with good corrosion resistance, ductility and strength. … [cont.]
Answered by Mike - Sun Jan 11 02:36:56 2009
Q. What are products that are manufactured because of the malleability of their materials. and ductility?
Asked by Jolin J. - Sun Jan 11 01:55:28 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. This refers to the ability of a metal to plastically deform without breaking or fracturing, with the cohesion between the molecules remaining sufficient to hold them together (see adhesion and cohesion). Ductility is important in wire drawing and sheet stamping. The metal must neither break nor be scraped off during these processes. Platinum, steel, copper, and tungsten have high ductility. Ductility is the study of how materials deform and flow in response to force. (Columbia Encyclopedia) I pasted a list of metals and alloys that fit this criteria as well as examples of many products. I hope this helps you. Aluminum and aluminum alloys are lightweight, non-ferrous metals with good corrosion resistance, ductility and strength. … [cont.]
Answered by Mike - Sun Jan 11 02:36:56 2009
what is the property of malleability of wires ?
Q. plzz answer in a long manner coz its one of my assignment question and its gotta be long
Asked by ItS Gr8 tO Be mE - Sat Jun 27 06:02:40 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Alright. You understand that malleability is the ability of a substance to deform flat. like foil. Okay. So, the property of malleability of a wire is the manner in which wires can be flattened. The property is different for different types of metals. Some, like gold, have extremely high malleability. Others, like silicon, lead and iron have a lower malleability and will eventually break apart, crack or shatter. Wires are different depending on their gauge. The the proportion of width change is as follows: (Original thickness / end thickness) x original width = end width. I don't know if that helps, but I gave you what I've got.
Answered by Razgriz One - Sat Jun 27 06:20:31 2009
Q. plzz answer in a long manner coz its one of my assignment question and its gotta be long
Asked by ItS Gr8 tO Be mE - Sat Jun 27 06:02:40 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Alright. You understand that malleability is the ability of a substance to deform flat. like foil. Okay. So, the property of malleability of a wire is the manner in which wires can be flattened. The property is different for different types of metals. Some, like gold, have extremely high malleability. Others, like silicon, lead and iron have a lower malleability and will eventually break apart, crack or shatter. Wires are different depending on their gauge. The the proportion of width change is as follows: (Original thickness / end thickness) x original width = end width. I don't know if that helps, but I gave you what I've got.
Answered by Razgriz One - Sat Jun 27 06:20:31 2009
what is malleability and why metals are malleable?
Q. what is malleability and why metals are malleable?
Asked by hendriyanto l - Sat Mar 1 10:39:13 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Malleability basically means it can be rearranged/bent. So if you take a copper rod and bend both ends, that means it's malleable. Metals are malleable because of the structure of their atoms. The atoms of a metal are in different 'planes' you can say, and when you bend a metal, the atoms just slide past eachother.
Answered by Andrew M - Sat Mar 1 10:46:26 2008
Q. what is malleability and why metals are malleable?
Asked by hendriyanto l - Sat Mar 1 10:39:13 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Malleability basically means it can be rearranged/bent. So if you take a copper rod and bend both ends, that means it's malleable. Metals are malleable because of the structure of their atoms. The atoms of a metal are in different 'planes' you can say, and when you bend a metal, the atoms just slide past eachother.
Answered by Andrew M - Sat Mar 1 10:46:26 2008
Are conductivity\malleability \ductility\solubility qualitative or quantitative?
Q. Are conductivity\malleability \ductility\solubility qualitative or quantitative?
Asked by TorontoRaptors - Mon Oct 15 19:36:22 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Qualitative. They have the quality of conducting electricity, not the quantity. They also have the quality of being bent and stretched. You can't measure those in units.
Answered by Ryan14 - Mon Oct 15 19:41:07 2007
Q. Are conductivity\malleability \ductility\solubility qualitative or quantitative?
Asked by TorontoRaptors - Mon Oct 15 19:36:22 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Qualitative. They have the quality of conducting electricity, not the quantity. They also have the quality of being bent and stretched. You can't measure those in units.
Answered by Ryan14 - Mon Oct 15 19:41:07 2007
Malleability is a characteristic of?
Q. Malleability is a characteristic of A) all elements B) semimetals C) metals D) nonmetals E) all compounds I think it is E??
Asked by J J - Tue Jul 21 13:41:55 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Metals. Malleability is the ability to be shaped or formed. This is more evident when metals dent, and things like that.
Answered by Mercury - Tue Jul 21 13:47:02 2009
Q. Malleability is a characteristic of A) all elements B) semimetals C) metals D) nonmetals E) all compounds I think it is E??
Asked by J J - Tue Jul 21 13:41:55 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Metals. Malleability is the ability to be shaped or formed. This is more evident when metals dent, and things like that.
Answered by Mercury - Tue Jul 21 13:47:02 2009
Wat is the density,hardness,tensile strength,brittleness,elas ticity,malleability,visco sity,buoyancy of aliens?
Q. This is my project for IPC someone please help me. Plx i am beggin you guys. thank you.
Asked by berlypanachakunnel - Wed Feb 4 15:50:45 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. wat
Answered by Antucket - Wed Feb 4 16:01:01 2009
Q. This is my project for IPC someone please help me. Plx i am beggin you guys. thank you.
Asked by berlypanachakunnel - Wed Feb 4 15:50:45 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. wat
Answered by Antucket - Wed Feb 4 16:01:01 2009
why do cast irons have low malleability?
Q. why do cast irons have low malleability?
Asked by TSI - Thu Jul 24 21:43:51 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The high carbon content of cast iron causes a large number of iron carbide crystals (Austenite and Martensite). These crystals prevent the movement of dislocations in the crystal lattice of the iron. Consequently, the metal undergoes almost no plastic deformation before it fractures. This is the definition of low malleability. There is some stuff called "ductile cast iron", which is not quite as bad.
Answered by Dave D - Thu Jul 24 23:13:32 2008
Q. why do cast irons have low malleability?
Asked by TSI - Thu Jul 24 21:43:51 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The high carbon content of cast iron causes a large number of iron carbide crystals (Austenite and Martensite). These crystals prevent the movement of dislocations in the crystal lattice of the iron. Consequently, the metal undergoes almost no plastic deformation before it fractures. This is the definition of low malleability. There is some stuff called "ductile cast iron", which is not quite as bad.
Answered by Dave D - Thu Jul 24 23:13:32 2008
From Yahoo Answer Search: 'Malleability'
Tue Mar 2 18:48:26 2010 [ refresh local cache ]
[Hide]▼
interview: Golden Age
American Chronicle
Indeed, the sheen and malleability that so appealed to ancient jewellery makers also make it an engineering material without compare. ...
American Chronicle
Indeed, the sheen and malleability that so appealed to ancient jewellery makers also make it an engineering material without compare. ...
sandpmain 2 gif
402px x 456px | 56.50kB
[source page]
psd 22 Aug 2006 23 08 40k malleability dcr 22 Aug 2006 23 12 40k sandpmain 2 gif 22 Aug 2006 23 12 56k sandpmain 1 gif 22 Aug 2006 23 12 59k
402px x 456px | 56.50kB
[source page]
psd 22 Aug 2006 23 08 40k malleability dcr 22 Aug 2006 23 12 40k sandpmain 2 gif 22 Aug 2006 23 12 56k sandpmain 1 gif 22 Aug 2006 23 12 59k
Malleability
Shawn
Sun, 15 Mar 2009 14:44:04 GM
Norman Doidge in TheBrain That Changes Itself holds astonishing narrations of how the encephalon can accommodate to challenges, rebuting the `` hard-wired '' theory of encephalon operating and explicating how with dedicated preparation ...
Shawn
Sun, 15 Mar 2009 14:44:04 GM
Norman Doidge in TheBrain That Changes Itself holds astonishing narrations of how the encephalon can accommodate to challenges, rebuting the `` hard-wired '' theory of encephalon operating and explicating how with dedicated preparation ...
[Hide]▲


