An inert gas is one that won't react with other gases. You can store inert gases with any other gases - oxygen (an oxidizing gas) and argon (an inert gas) are commonly stored together in industrial settings.
Yes, inert gases can be stored with oxidizing and reactive gases. Inert gases do not react with other gases or with liquids. Inert gases may be used to blanket tanks of reactive liquids.
inert as in the inert gases or "noble" gases
As we all know that noble gases are also called INERT GASES, so the subgroup VIII of GROUP 'A' contains only noble gases and inert gases so helium and neon are also in VIII-A so they are inert gases.
Inert means non-reactive. Inert gases do not react with fluorine and oxygen except under exceptional conditions that do not occure naturally on the Earth.
noble gases, inert gases
Gold is active, or at least not inert. Only the noble gases are inert.
Inert gases are compatible with all other gases and may be stored together.
inert means they are not reactive gases. (:
Inert gases are the noble gases (He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, and Rn). They used to be called the inert gases until Neil Bartlett proved that you could make compounds out of some of them, so they were renamed "inert" gases.
there is 1.25 percent of inert gases in the atmosphere
there is 1.25 percent of inert gases in the atmosphere
inert as in the inert gases or "noble" gases
Inert gases can also be called noble gases. An example is Helium.
Yes. Neon is a part of noble gases (or inert gases)
Another name for noble gases is inert gases.
As we all know that noble gases are also called INERT GASES, so the subgroup VIII of GROUP 'A' contains only noble gases and inert gases so helium and neon are also in VIII-A so they are inert gases.
No. halogens are not inert gases. Halogens are group 17 elements. Inert gases or noble gases are the group 18 elements Helium (He), neon (Ne), argon (Ar), krypton (Kr), xenon (Xe) and radon (Rn) are the six inert gases.
The rare or inert gases are more commonly known as the noble gases.