it will combine with anything but usually a group 17 element
Potassium combines with magnesium to help your muscles contract, while potassium and sodium help regulate fluids around your cells and keep you from retaining too much water
Potassium may bond with Chlorine (Cl), Sodium (Na), Oxygen (O) and many other elements nonmetals on the right side of the periodic table.
Potassium is one of the most reactive of all elements and easily combines with others.
Potassium is in column 1. Therefore it would be the best to combine with column 17 because it will make the perfect amount of electrons on each energy level.
It can bond with almost any negatively charged ion (or anion), including polyatomic ions.
potassium hydroxide + hydrogen
eq. 2K + 2H2O ==== 2KOH + H2
4K + O2 ---> 2K2O
2
sodium and potassium
Potassium chloride, with formula KCl.
Potassium bromide... K+ + Br- --> KBr
Potassium fluoride of KF is formed.
2K+Cl2=2KCl
4K + O2 ---> 2K2O
The potassium cation,K +and the bromine anionBr -combine to form the ionic compoundKBrwhich is potassium bromide.
No. Since potassium is an element by itself, it does not have calcium in them. However, it could combine together to create potassium calcium (which is a vitamin). There are such things as a potassium calcium channel in a cell.
A KNiFe
Hydrogen, sodium, & potassium.
Potassium (K) does not readily combine with potassium nitrate (KNO3).
potassium oxide is formed. 4K + O2 ---> 2K2O
2
sodium and potassium
Yes, but there are other, more harmless ways to produce KCl