Although gold is unreactive, it forms many compounds with a range of oxidation states.
No. Neon is highly unreactive. No ordinary compounds of neon are known.
no under special conditions xenon forms compounds such as XeF2, XeF4, XeOF4 , XeF6 etc
no rection takes place.because two of the compounds are already oxidized n r therefore inert(unreactive).
Not a lot! Sodium is a reactive metal, nitrogen is an unreactive diatomic gas. Sodium forms compounds where it loses an electron, to form the Na+ ion. Nitrogen forms covalent compounds such as NH3 and ionic compounds where it gains three electrons to form the N3- ion.
Helium is unreactive and is chemically inert. Krypton generally compounds with fluorine such as KrF2, KrF4
Although gold is unreactive, it forms many compounds with a range of oxidation states.
Because helium is an unreactive chemical element.
The interesting fact is that gold is rather unreactive and forms very few compounds.
Argon is the most unreactive in this series. Cheese is not an element; it is a mixture of compounds.
No. Neon is highly unreactive. No ordinary compounds of neon are known.
Because noble gases are very unreactive only a small number of compounds is known: halides, oxides, salts, especially from xenon. Some compounds are unstable.
Because it has 2 electrons which fill up its electron shell, making it unreactive and stable.
Noble gases doesn't form many compounds because they are extremely unreactive.
no under special conditions xenon forms compounds such as XeF2, XeF4, XeOF4 , XeF6 etc
Noble gases are generally considered unreactive, due to the stability of their electron shells, and it was originally believed that they could not form compounds. It was later discovered that a very strong oxidizing agent though is able to form compounds with them.
No. Helium is not molecular it is monoatomic. Helium is unreactive and forms no compounds.