how are electrons made free in metals even after their bonds are satisfied?
Answers
Answered by
0
Metals make up most of the elements in the periodic table (around 80%), and they are special. When metals bond with themselves, they bond in a different way than when they bond with other elements. It isn't ionic or molecular or covalent. It is its own metal bond.
Answered by
0
Metals make up most of the elements in the periodic table (around 80%), and they are special. When metals bond with themselves, they bond in a different way than when they bond with other elements. It isn't ionic or molecular or covalent. It is its own metal bond.
Read more on Brainly.in - https://brainly.in/question/7289249#readmore
Similar questions
Math,
6 months ago
Political Science,
6 months ago
Economy,
6 months ago
Geography,
1 year ago
English,
1 year ago