halogens
Chlorine is a Halogen. Along with the rest of the elements in the group. Mostly ending with ine. Bromine and Fluorine for example.
Helium, fluorine, and chlorine are all elements found on the periodic table. They belong to different groups: helium is a noble gas, fluorine is a halogen, and chlorine is also a halogen. They have different properties and reactivity levels.
Noble gases are, for all intents and purposes, unreactive - there are a few noble gas compounds but you have to really work at it to convince noble gases to form bonds. Fluorine is an extremely reactive gas, hence it is not a noble gas. It is a halogen - the most reactive halogen of them all.
No noble gas is isoelectronic with the element chlorine. But argon is isoelectronic with the chloride ion.
Argon is a noble gas. It is not a halogen. Fluorine is a example for that.
No! Fluorine is the most "ignoble" gas, because it will bond to almost any other element, and chlorine is not far behind in its indiscriminate reactivity.
There are two gases in fluorine(Halogen) family, which are Fluorine and Chlorine. In some cases bromine can also be included as a gas.
Yes, fluorine is in the halogen family. Halogens are a group of elements that includes fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine. They are known for their high reactivity and tendency to form salts with metals.
Chlorine is not a member of noble gas group. It belongs to halogen family.
No, Rn (radon) is not a halogen. It is a noble gas and is located in Group 18 of the periodic table. Halogens are located in Group 17 and include elements like fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine.
No, argon is not in the halogen family. Halogens include elements like fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine, which are part of Group 17 of the periodic table. Argon is a noble gas and belongs to Group 18.
no. chlorine is a halogen (a group 17 element) and not a noble gas (a group 18 element). However chloride ion will have the same electronic configuration as the noble gas, argon