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17 May, 05:09

Which element is most likely to have the ability to be hammered into a thin sheet? (Nitrogen, Silicon, Fluorine, Calcium)

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Answers (2)
  1. 17 May, 06:37
    0
    Question:

    Options

    1) Nitrogen

    2) Silicon

    3) Fluorine

    4) Calcium

    Answer:

    The correct option is;

    4) Calcium

    Explanation:

    We analyze each of the elements as follows;

    Nitrogen is a gas at room temperature, therefore it cannot be hammered into sheets

    Silicon is a brittle non-metal, that breaks when struck

    Fluorine is a gas at room temperature, therefore it cannot be hammered into sheets

    Calcium is a soft, solid silvery-white, metallic element that is ductile, hence, it can be beaten into very thin sheets.
  2. 17 May, 08:01
    0
    Calcium

    Explanation:

    The ability to be hammered into sheets is known in chemistry as malleability. One of the properties of metals is that metals are malleable. All metals thus have a common property that they can be hammered into sheets used in diverse applications. We can see diverse thin sheets of metals around us used to diverse purposes. This is a vary important property of metals that amplify its importance in materials science.

    Of all the options listed, only calcium is a metal. Since nonmetals and metalloids can not be hammered into sheets, nitrogen, silicon and fluorine can not be hammered into sheets. Calcium, being a metal can be hammered into thin sheets.
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