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Grade 10/ Science/ Chemistry/ Metals & Non-metals
Chapter 3 · NCERT Science 086

Metals
& Non-metals

Why a wire is copper and a pencil is carbon, which metal beats which, and how we pull metals out of rock. Properties with a reason behind each one.

⚙️ 5 topics⏱ ~36 min📝 20-question quiz
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Play with it

Will it displace?

Pick a metal and a salt solution — a metal higher in the reactivity series displaces one below it, so watch which pairs react and which do nothing.

Explore · Will it displace?

Most reactive → least: Mg · Zn · Fe · Pb · Cu · Ag

Learn

The five ideas in this chapter

Metals are usually lustrous, malleable, ductile, sonorous and good conductors with high melting points. Non-metals are usually dull, brittle and poor conductors. But watch the famous exceptions.

Explore · Compare properties
    • With oxygen: metal + O₂ → metal oxide (basic). e.g. 2Cu + O₂ → 2CuO.
    • With water: reactive metals react (Na violently, Mg slowly); many do not.
    • With acids: metal + dilute acid → salt + hydrogen.
    • With salt solutions: a more reactive metal displaces a less reactive one.

    Metals can be ranked by how readily they react — the reactivity series. A metal higher in the series will displace one lower down from its salt solution. Try it:

    Try the interactive at the top of the page — pick a metal and a salt and see whether a more reactive metal displaces a less reactive one.

    A metal loses electrons (forming a positive ion) and a non-metal gains them (forming a negative ion). The opposite charges attract — an ionic (electrovalent) bond. e.g. Na → Na⁺ + e⁻ and Cl + e⁻ → Cl⁻, giving NaCl.

    Properties of ionic compounds

    High melting/boiling points, usually soluble in water, and they conduct electricity when molten or dissolved (the ions become free to move).

    Metals occur as minerals; an ore is a mineral worth extracting from. How we extract depends on reactivity:

    • Most reactive (K, Na, Ca, Mg, Al): electrolysis of molten compounds.
    • Moderately reactive (Zn, Fe, Pb): roast/calcine the ore to the oxide, then reduce with carbon.
    • Least reactive (Ag, Au): found native or extracted easily.

    Corrosion (rust, tarnish) is prevented by painting, oiling, galvanising (zinc coat), or making alloys (e.g. stainless steel).

    Check yourself

    Competency quiz

    Modelled on CBSE's competency-based pattern — MCQ, assertion–reason and case-study items, the kind that now make up about half your board paper.

    Score 0/20

    Interactive explainers inspired by OpenMAIC (THU-MAIC, MIT-licensed). Content from NCERT Class 10 Science.

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