Xenon is a noble gas. I would think any compounds would be hard to make with using Xenon.
Xenon form very few compounds. but it does have a few fluorides and oxides. One of those is Xenon tetrafluoride (XeF4)
Xenon can form a few compounds with fluorine and oxygen.
Sulfur can form ionic compounds (eg SO2), but Xenon is a noble gas and does not react to form compounds.
Xenon is an inert monoatomic gas. It isone of the "inert" gases It does form some compounds, such as unstable covalent compounds with fluorine. It does not form compounds containing Xe ions.
All the compounds of xenon are prepared only in the laboratory. The most known is XeF6.
Xenon is an element so it is not made up of any compounds.
Xenon is a noble gas. I would think any compounds would be hard to make with using Xenon.
Xenon is an element and, being an element, it cannot contain any compounds - man-made or natural.
Xenon form very few compounds. but it does have a few fluorides and oxides. One of those is Xenon tetrafluoride (XeF4)
It was believed that, being a Noble gas, Xenon would be inert and so not form any compounds.
The number of compounds of noble gases is very low; salts derived from xenon are known.
Xenon ( At no 54 ) forms the maximum number of compounds for an noble gas
Because noble gases are very unreactive only a small number of compounds is known: halides, oxides, salts, especially from xenon. Some compounds are unstable.
Helium and Xenon are both Noble(or inert) gases. They are very unreactive. Helium has no known compounds and exists only in its atomic state. Xenon can be forced to react with extremely reactive compounds like Fluorine to form XeF4 . But this reaction is extremely hard, because Xenon is so unreactive. They are both gases with very low boiling temperatures.
Xenon can form a few compounds with fluorine and oxygen.
Sulfur can form ionic compounds (eg SO2), but Xenon is a noble gas and does not react to form compounds.