Science, asked by gurtejramgarhia6867, 10 months ago

silicon is a metallold. why

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Answered by ayadaganisharathkuma
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Answer:

Silicon is neither metal nor non-metal; it's a metalloid, an element that falls somewhere between the two. The category of metalloid is something of a gray area, with no firm definition of what fits the bill, but metalloids generally have properties of both metals and non-metals. They look metallic, but conduct electricity only intermediately well. Silicon is a semiconductor, meaning that it does conduct electricity. Unlike a typical metal, however, silicon gets better at conducting electricity as the temperature increases (metals get worse at conductivity at higher temperatures).

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Answered by VaibhavJain1995
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Answer:

Answer: Silicon has 4 electrons in its outer orbitals and to attain stable state it can DONATE all its electrons like a METAL or it can ACCEPT 4 electrons like NON METALS!! ,it shows both the properties of a metal and a non-metal .So,it is called a metalloid or a semi-metal.

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