Nonmetal

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Nonmetal is a term used in chemistry when classifying the chemical elements. On the basis of their general physical and chemical properties, every element in the periodic table can be termed either a metal or a non-metal. (A few elements with intermediate properties are referred to as metalloids.)

The elements generally regarded as nonmetals are:

A possible form of periodic table at a pressure of three million atmospheres. It is possible that all the elements become metallic at sufficiently high pressure. The elements C, N, F, Cl, Ne, Ar, Kr, and He (in grey) have not yet been investigated at sufficiently high pressures to achieve metallisation.
A possible form of periodic table at a pressure of three million atmospheres. It is possible that all the elements become metallic at sufficiently high pressure. The elements C, N, F, Cl, Ne, Ar, Kr, and He (in grey) have not yet been investigated at sufficiently high pressures to achieve metallisation.

There is no rigorous definition for the term "nonmetal" - it covers a general spectrum of behaviour. Common properties considered characteristic of a nonmetal include:

Only eighteen elements in the periodic table are generally considered nonmetals, compared to over eighty metals, but nonmetals make up most of the crust, atmosphere and oceans of the earth. Bulk tissues of living 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 polyatomic.

Nevertheless, even these 18 tend to become metallic at huge pressures.[1]

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