Nonmetal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Together with the metals and metalloids, a nonmetal is one of three categories of chemical elements as distinguished by ionization and bonding properties. These properties stem from the fact that nonmetals are highly electronegative, i.e. they gain valence electrons from other atoms more readily than they give them up.
The nonmetals are halogens, noble gases and the following elements in order of atomic number (nonmetals as chemical series):
Most nonmetals are found at the upper right of the periodic table. The exception is hydrogen, which is usually placed at the upper left with the alkali metals, but behaves like a nonmetal under most conditions. Unlike metals, which are electrically conductive, nearly all nonmetals are either insulators or semiconductors. Graphite, an allotrope of carbon, is an example of a nonmetal that does conduct electricity. Nonmetals may form ionic bonds with metals by gaining electrons, or covalent bonds with other nonmetals. The oxides of nonmetals are acidic.
There are only eighteen known nonmetals, compared to over eighty metals, but nonmetals make up most of the earth, particularly in the outer layers. Organisms are composed almost entirely of nonmetals. Many nonmetals (hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine) are diatomic, and most of the rest are otherwise polyatomic.
ca:Plantilla:Elements químics
ar:لا فلز
ca:No metall
cs:Nekov
cy:Anfetel
de:Nichtmetall
el:Αμέταλλα
es:No metal
eo:Nemetalo
fr:Non-métal
ko:비금속
is:Málmleysingi
it:Non metallo
he:אל מתכת
mk:Неметал
nl:Niet-metaal
nds:Nichtmetalle
ja:非金属元素
no:Ikke-metall
nn:Ikkje-metall
pl:Niemetale
pt:Não-metal
ro:Nemetal
ru:Неметаллы
simple:Nonmetal
fi:Epämetalli
sv:Icke-metall
th:อโลหะ
tr:Ametal
zh:非金属元素

