By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Distinguish metals and non-metals by properties
  • 2Apply reactivity series
  • 3Understand ionic compound formation
  • 4Know metallurgy methods
  • 5Identify common ores
💡
Why this chapter matters
Foundation of chemistry. Indian metallurgy heritage. Critical for engineering, materials science.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Metals and Non-metals — Class 10 Science

"Iron built civilisations. Silicon powers smartphones. Carbon underlies all life. Elements shape destinies."

1. About the Chapter

This chapter explores:

  • Physical & chemical properties of metals and non-metals
  • Reactivity series of metals
  • Ionic compounds formation
  • Extraction of metals from ores (metallurgy)
  • Corrosion and prevention

Why Important

  • Indian metallurgy (steel, aluminium, gold) is major industry
  • Foundation for chemistry, materials science
  • Critical for engineering

2. Physical Properties

Metals

  • Lustrous (shiny) when polished
  • Malleable (can be hammered into sheets)
  • Ductile (can be drawn into wires)
  • Hard (most are; exceptions: Na, K)
  • Good conductors of heat and electricity
  • High density
  • High melting/boiling points (mostly)
  • Sonorous (ring when struck)
  • Solid at room temperature (except mercury — liquid)

Non-metals

  • Dull (not shiny; exception: iodine)
  • Brittle (break, don't bend)
  • Poor conductors (exception: graphite — carbon)
  • Low density
  • Low melting/boiling points (mostly)
  • Not sonorous
  • Solid, liquid, or gas at room temp

Exceptions to Remember

  • Mercury (Hg) — only metal LIQUID at room temp
  • Bromine (Br) — only non-metal LIQUID at room temp
  • Gallium and Caesium — metals with very low melting points (~30°C)
  • Carbon (graphite) — non-metal that conducts electricity
  • Diamond — hardest natural substance, made of carbon (non-metal)

3. Chemical Properties

Metals — Chemical Reactions

1. With Oxygen → Metal Oxide (BASIC)

  • 2Mg + O₂ → 2MgO
  • 4Al + 3O₂ → 2Al₂O₃

Metal oxides are BASIC (turn red litmus blue when dissolved in water).

2. With Water → Metal Hydroxide + H₂

  • 2Na + 2H₂O → 2NaOH + H₂↑ (violent reaction!)
  • Mg + 2H₂O → Mg(OH)₂ + H₂ (slow)
  • Some metals (Au, Ag, Pt) DON'T react with water

3. With Acids → Salt + H₂

  • Mg + 2HCl → MgCl₂ + H₂↑
  • Au, Ag don't react with acids

4. With Other Metal Salts → Displacement

  • Zn + CuSO₄ → ZnSO₄ + Cu (Zn more reactive than Cu)

Non-metals — Chemical Reactions

1. With Oxygen → Non-metal Oxide (ACIDIC)

  • C + O₂ → CO₂ (acidic when dissolved)
  • S + O₂ → SO₂

Non-metal oxides are ACIDIC.

2. With Hydrogen → Hydride

  • 2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O (water = hydride of oxygen)
  • N₂ + 3H₂ → 2NH₃

4. Reactivity Series

What is it?

A list of metals arranged in DECREASING order of reactivity.

Series (most → least reactive)

K, Na, Ca, Mg, Al, Zn, Fe, Pb, H, Cu, Hg, Ag, Au

(Mnemonic: 'Please Stop Calling My Aunt Zelda In Public Hating Copper Mercury Silver Gold' — many versions exist.)

Importance

  • A metal HIGHER in series DISPLACES a metal LOWER from its salt
  • Example: Zn + CuSO₄ → ZnSO₄ + Cu (Zn > Cu in series)
  • Reverse doesn't happen: Cu + ZnSO₄ → NO REACTION

Position of Hydrogen

Hydrogen is in the middle. Metals ABOVE H displace H from acids (give H₂). Metals BELOW H don't.


5. Ionic Compounds

Formation

  • Metal loses electron(s) → forms positive ion (cation)
  • Non-metal gains electron(s) → forms negative ion (anion)
  • Cation and anion attract → IONIC BOND

Example: NaCl

  • Na → Na⁺ + e⁻ (loses 1 electron)
  • Cl + e⁻ → Cl⁻ (gains 1 electron)
  • Na⁺ and Cl⁻ attract: NaCl

Properties of Ionic Compounds

  • Crystalline solids
  • High melting/boiling points
  • Soluble in water (mostly)
  • Conduct electricity when MOLTEN or DISSOLVED (not in solid state)
  • Brittle — break along crystal planes

6. Extraction of Metals (Metallurgy)

Steps in Metallurgy

  1. Mining — get ore from earth
  2. Concentration — separate useful mineral
  3. Reduction — extract metal from ore
  4. Refining — purify the metal

Reduction Methods Depend on Reactivity

Most Reactive (K, Na, Ca, Mg, Al):

  • Use ELECTROLYSIS (electric current)
  • E.g., aluminium from bauxite: 2Al₂O₃ → 4Al + 3O₂

Moderately Reactive (Zn, Fe, Pb, Cu):

  • Roast or calcine ore to oxide
  • Then REDUCE with carbon: 2ZnO + C → 2Zn + CO₂

Least Reactive (Hg, Ag, Au):

  • Often found in NATIVE form (pure)
  • Heating alone may suffice: 2HgS + 3O₂ → 2HgO + 2SO₂; 2HgO → 2Hg + O₂

Indian Metallurgy

  • India was first to extract zinc (Zawar, Rajasthan, ~1200 BCE)
  • Famous for iron pillar at Mehrauli, Delhi (1600 years old, no rust!)
  • Damascus steel — Indian origin
  • Modern: Tata Steel, JSW, SAIL — world-leading

7. Common Ores

MetalOreFormula
IronHematite, MagnetiteFe₂O₃, Fe₃O₄
AluminiumBauxiteAl₂O₃·2H₂O
CopperChalcopyriteCuFeS₂
ZincZinc blendeZnS
LeadGalenaPbS
MercuryCinnabarHgS
SilverArgentiteAg₂S

8. Corrosion (Detailed)

What is Corrosion?

Slow eating away of metals due to action of air, moisture, chemicals.

Examples

  • Rusting of iron (Fe₂O₃·xH₂O — reddish-brown)
  • Tarnishing of silver (Ag₂S — black, by sulphur in air)
  • Greening of copper (CuCO₃·Cu(OH)₂ — basic copper carbonate)

Prevention

  • Painting
  • Greasing/oiling
  • Galvanisation (zinc coating — protects iron)
  • Electroplating (silver/chromium plating)
  • Alloying (mixing metals — stainless steel = Fe + Cr + Ni)
  • Sacrificial protection (magnesium block on iron)

9. Worked Examples

Example 1: Reactivity

Can Cu displace Zn from ZnSO₄?

  • NO. In activity series, Zn > Cu.
  • Only Zn can displace Cu (from CuSO₄), not vice versa.

Example 2: Identification

A non-metal liquid at room temperature.

  • BROMINE (Br₂). Only non-metal liquid at room temp.

Example 3: Property

Why are wires made of copper?

  • Cu is excellent CONDUCTOR of electricity. Also DUCTILE (can be drawn into thin wires).

Example 4: Ionic Formation

How does magnesium chloride form?

  • Mg loses 2 e⁻ → Mg²⁺
  • Each Cl gains 1 e⁻ → Cl⁻
  • Need 2 Cl⁻ per Mg²⁺ → MgCl₂

Example 5: Reduction Method

Why is aluminium extracted by electrolysis, not by reduction with carbon?

  • Al is HIGH in reactivity series. C cannot reduce it.
  • Electrolysis is needed for highly reactive metals.

10. Common Mistakes

  1. All metals are solids

    • Mercury (Hg) is LIQUID at room temperature.
  2. Non-metals don't conduct

    • GRAPHITE (form of carbon) conducts electricity.
  3. Activity series memorisation

    • K, Na, Ca, Mg, Al, Zn, Fe, Pb, H, Cu, Hg, Ag, Au
  4. Wrong oxide nature

    • METAL OXIDES are BASIC. NON-METAL OXIDES are ACIDIC.
  5. Ionic compounds conduct in solid state

    • NO. They conduct only when MOLTEN or DISSOLVED.

11. Indian Heritage

Ancient Metallurgy

  • Iron Pillar at Mehrauli (Delhi, ~4th century CE) — pure iron, no rust in 1600 years!
  • Damascus steel (wootz steel from South India) — legendary for sharp blades
  • Brass and bronze widely used in temple bells, coins
  • Zinc smelting in Zawar (Rajasthan) ~1200 BCE — earliest in world

Modern

  • India is #2 steel producer (2024)
  • Major iron ore exports (Odisha, Karnataka)
  • Hindalco (aluminium), Vedanta major companies

12. Conclusion

Metals and Non-metals are FUNDAMENTAL CHEMISTRY:

  • Properties differ (lustrous vs dull, conducting vs not)
  • Reactions with O₂, H₂O, acids
  • Reactivity Series predicts behaviour
  • Metallurgy turns ores into useful metals
  • Indian heritage in metallurgy is rich

Master:

  • Properties (physical and chemical)
  • Activity series
  • Common reactions
  • Extraction methods
  • Common ores

This is HIGH-MARK chapter. Practice 15+ problems.

Metals built our civilisation. Understanding them is understanding modern life.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Reactivity series
K > Na > Ca > Mg > Al > Zn > Fe > Pb > H > Cu > Hg > Ag > Au
Memorise!
Metal + O₂
→ Metal Oxide (BASIC)
Non-metal + O₂
→ Non-metal Oxide (ACIDIC)
Metal + Acid
→ Salt + H₂
Active metals only
Displacement
More reactive displaces less reactive
Ionic compound
Metal (cation) + Non-metal (anion)
Electrostatic attraction
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
All metals are solids
Mercury (Hg) is LIQUID at room temp. Only exception.
WATCH OUT
Non-metals don't conduct
Graphite (carbon) conducts electricity. Most non-metals don't, but graphite is exception.
WATCH OUT
Ionic conduct in solid
Ionic compounds conduct ONLY when MOLTEN or DISSOLVED — not in solid state.
WATCH OUT
Wrong oxide nature
METAL oxides are BASIC. NON-METAL oxides are ACIDIC.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Property
Which is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature?
Show solution
✦ Answer: Mercury (Hg). All other metals are solid at room temperature.
Q2EASY· Activity
Can iron displace zinc from zinc sulphate?
Show solution
✦ Answer: NO. In activity series, Zn > Fe. So Zn can displace Fe (from FeSO₄), but Fe cannot displace Zn.
Q3MEDIUM· Reactions
Why do we use aluminium for making cooking utensils?
Show solution
Step 1 — Light weight. Aluminium has low density. Light to carry/handle. Step 2 — Good conductor of heat. Heat distributes quickly across the utensil — even cooking. Step 3 — Resistant to corrosion. Aluminium reacts with O₂ to form a thin Al₂O₃ layer that protects metal underneath. So doesn't rust easily. Step 4 — Non-toxic. Doesn't react with most foods. Safe for cooking. Step 5 — Affordable. Abundant element (8% of Earth's crust). Mass produced. ✦ Answer: Aluminium is used in cooking utensils because: (1) light weight, (2) excellent heat conductor (even cooking), (3) corrosion-resistant (Al₂O₃ layer protects), (4) non-toxic with most foods, (5) affordable due to abundance. Drawback: reacts with acidic foods like tamarind — corrodes.
Q4HARD· Metallurgy
Describe the extraction of aluminium from bauxite.
Show solution
Step 1 — Ore identification. Aluminium is extracted from BAUXITE (Al₂O₃·2H₂O), found mainly in Odisha, Gujarat, MP in India. Step 2 — Why electrolysis? Aluminium is HIGHLY REACTIVE (near top of activity series). Cannot be reduced by carbon. Must use ELECTROLYSIS. Step 3 — Purification (Bayer Process). Bauxite has impurities. Steps: (a) Treat with hot NaOH solution: Al₂O₃ dissolves; impurities (Fe₂O₃, SiO₂) don't. Al₂O₃ + 2NaOH → 2NaAlO₂ + H₂O (b) Add water and dilute. Sodium aluminate hydrolyses, precipitating Al(OH)₃. (c) Heat Al(OH)₃ to get pure Al₂O₃ (alumina). Step 4 — Electrolysis (Hall-Heroult Process). Pure Al₂O₃ has VERY HIGH melting point (~2000°C) — difficult to melt. Mix Al₂O₃ with CRYOLITE (Na₃AlF₆) to lower melting point to ~950°C. Electrolyse molten mixture: - Cathode (negative): Al³⁺ + 3e⁻ → Al (pure aluminium settles at bottom) - Anode (positive, carbon): O²⁻ → O₂ (oxygen escapes; oxidises carbon to CO₂) Step 5 — Net reaction. 2Al₂O₃ → 4Al + 3O₂ Or with carbon anode: 2Al₂O₃ + 3C → 4Al + 3CO₂ Step 6 — Massive energy use. Aluminium production consumes ENORMOUS electricity. India uses several GW of electricity for aluminium. Step 7 — Indian context. • NALCO (National Aluminium Co Ltd) — public sector • Vedanta (Sterlite, BALCO) • Hindalco (Aditya Birla Group) India is 2nd largest aluminium producer (~4 million tonnes/year). Step 8 — Applications. Used in: aircraft, cars, kitchen utensils, electrical wires (alternative to copper), packaging foils, soft drink cans, doors and windows. ✦ Answer: Aluminium extraction has TWO main stages: (1) BAYER PROCESS — purify bauxite using NaOH to get pure Al₂O₃; (2) HALL-HEROULT PROCESS — electrolysis of molten Al₂O₃ + cryolite (lowers MP) at ~950°C. Cathode: Al³⁺ + 3e⁻ → Al. Energy-intensive. India is 2nd largest producer through NALCO, Vedanta, Hindalco.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Metals: lustrous, malleable, ductile, good conductor
  • Non-metals: dull, brittle, poor conductor
  • Exceptions: Hg (metal liquid), Br (non-metal liquid), graphite (non-metal conductor)
  • Reactivity series: K, Na, Ca, Mg, Al, Zn, Fe, Pb, H, Cu, Hg, Ag, Au
  • Metal + O₂ → Metal Oxide (BASIC)
  • Non-metal + O₂ → Non-metal Oxide (ACIDIC)
  • Metal + Acid → Salt + H₂ (above H in series)
  • Ionic bond: metal loses e⁻ (cation); non-metal gains e⁻ (anion)
  • Ionic compounds: high MP, soluble in water, conduct when molten/dissolved
  • Active metals: electrolysis extraction (Al)
  • Moderate: carbon reduction (Fe, Zn, Cu)
  • Inactive: heating alone (Hg, Ag, Au)
  • Iron Pillar of Delhi: 1600 years old, no rust
  • India: 2nd largest steel producer

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 10-12 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ13Properties, exceptions
Short2-32Reactions, activity series
Long51Metallurgy, corrosion
Prep strategy
  • Memorise reactivity series
  • Know exceptions (Hg, Br, graphite)
  • Master metallurgy steps
  • Know common ores

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Indian Steel Industry

Tata Steel (founded 1907), SAIL, JSW. India is 2nd largest steel producer.

Iron Pillar of Delhi

1600-year-old iron pillar at Mehrauli has NOT rusted. Mystery of ancient Indian metallurgy.

Hindalco aluminium

Aditya Birla Group's aluminium giant. India is 2nd largest aluminium producer.

Indian gold imports

India consumes massive gold annually (jewellery, investment). Gold doesn't corrode.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Memorise reactivity series
  2. Know exceptions clearly
  3. Use displacement reactions
  4. Connect to Indian metallurgy

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Electrode potentials
  • Refining methods (electrolytic, distillation, zone refining)
  • Indian Bronze Age and Iron Age
  • Properties of d-block elements

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 10 BoardVery High
Science OlympiadVery High
NEET / JEEVery High

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Gold is at the BOTTOM of reactivity series — extremely UNREACTIVE. It doesn't react with oxygen (no rust), water, most acids (only aqua regia: HNO₃ + HCl dissolves it). That's why gold artifacts remain shiny after thousands of years. Used in jewellery, electronics (corrosion-free contacts).
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 20 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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