METALS & NON-METALS โ CORE CONCEPT
Metals and Non-Metals are two broad categories of elements. Understanding their properties and reactions is essential for RRB Group D Science.
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CORE CONCEPT
Metals are elements that are shiny, conduct electricity and heat, and can be beaten into sheets or drawn into wires. Non-Metals are elements that are generally dull, poor conductors, and brittle in solid form.
About 80% of all elements in the periodic table are metals.
Non-metals are found on the right side of the periodic table.
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KEY PROPERTIES
METALS:
- Lustrous (shiny surface)
- Hard and strong (except Na and K which are soft)
- Good conductors of heat and electricity
- Malleable โ can be hammered into thin sheets (Gold is most malleable)
- Ductile โ can be drawn into wires (Gold is most ductile; Silver is best conductor)
- High melting and boiling points (except Mercury โ liquid at room temp; Gallium โ melts in hand)
- Produce metallic sound when struck (Sonorous)
- Generally solid at room temperature (except Mercury)
NON-METALS:
- Non-lustrous (except Iodine and Diamond which are shiny)
- Poor conductors (except Graphite which conducts electricity)
- Brittle in solid form โ cannot be hammered
- Low melting and boiling points (except Diamond โ highest melting point)
- Non-sonorous
- Can be solid, liquid (Bromine), or gas at room temperature
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CHEMICAL REACTIONS OF METALS
With Oxygen: Metal + Oxygen โ Metal Oxide (Basic in nature)
Example: 4Na + O2 โ 2Na2O
With Water:
- Na and K react violently with cold water
- Mg reacts with hot water
- Fe reacts with steam only
- Cu, Au, Ag โ do NOT react with water
With Acids: Metal + Dilute Acid โ Salt + Hydrogen gas
Example: Zn + H2SO4 โ ZnSO4 + H2
Non-metals form acidic oxides (e.g., SO2, CO2 dissolve in water to form acids).
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REACTIVITY SERIES (Important Order to Remember)
K > Na > Ca > Mg > Al > Zn > Fe > Ni > Sn > Pb > H > Cu > Hg > Ag > Au
Trick: King Narendra Can Make A Zinc Fence Now Since Police Have Caught Him Smoking Alcohol
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EXAM PATTERNS
RRB Group D frequently asks:
- Which metal is liquid at room temperature? (Mercury)
- Which non-metal conducts electricity? (Graphite)
- Which metal is most malleable? (Gold)
- Which gas is produced when metal reacts with acid? (Hydrogen)
- Best conductor of electricity among metals? (Silver)
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SHORTCUT / TRICK
Trick 1 โ Exceptions to remember (these are the MCQ traps):
- Mercury = metal + liquid at room temp
- Bromine = non-metal + liquid at room temp
- Graphite = non-metal + conducts electricity
- Iodine = non-metal + shiny/lustrous
- Sodium & Potassium = metals + very soft, stored in kerosene
- Diamond = non-metal + hardest natural substance + highest melting point
Trick 2 โ Acid reaction memory: 'Metals above Hydrogen in reactivity series can displace H2 from dilute acids.' Copper, Silver, Gold CANNOT.
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WORKED EXAMPLE
Question: Iron reacts with steam to form which compound and which gas?
Step 1: Identify the type of reaction โ Metal + Water (Steam)
Step 2: Iron reacts with steam (not cold or hot water)
Step 3: Write the equation:
3Fe + 4H2O (steam) โ Fe3O4 + 4H2
Step 4: Product is Iron (II,III) Oxide โ Fe3O4 (black magnetic oxide) and Hydrogen gas.
Answer: Fe3O4 and Hydrogen gas (H2)
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COMMON MISTAKE
Students confuse 'best conductor' with 'most malleable.' Silver is the BEST conductor of electricity. Gold is the MOST malleable and ductile. Do NOT mix these two up โ this is a very common MCQ trap in RRB exams.