nah bro. they don't
Yes, they have similar chemical properties.
Potassium is more similar to lithium because they both belong to the alkali metal group in the periodic table, which share similar chemical properties. Lead, on the other hand, is a metal from a different group and has different physical and chemical properties compared to both potassium and lithium.
Lithium is similar to other alkali metals such as sodium and potassium because it belongs to the same group on the periodic table. These elements share similar chemical properties due to having one electron in their outer shell, which makes them highly reactive.
Each element has similar properties to the other elements in its group on the periodic table. Sodium is an alkali metal, and those are the elements in Group 1 of the periodic table of elements. We know that lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium and francium all have similar chemical properties.
Lithium and potassium has same properties as sodium.They are alkali metals.They are placed in group-1.The elements of the same group have same chemical properties. Li and K are the elements above and below Na in the period. So they have same properties as sodium.
The are of course other alkali metals.Alkali metals are: lithium, sodium, potassium, caesium, rubidium, francium.
Na is chemically more like Li than Mg, only physically (measurements, mass) it looks more like Mg
Lithium (Li) has a similar chemical reactivity in water as potassium (K) because they both belong to the same group (alkali metals) in the periodic table. Both lithium and potassium react vigorously with water, liberating hydrogen gas and forming alkaline solutions.
There will be no reaction between the lithium and the potassium hydroxide. However, since the potassium hydroxide is in solution, the lithium will still react with the water to form lithium hydroxide and hydrogen gas. 2Li + H2O --> H2 + LiOH.
Lithium, sodium, and potassium react vigorously with water to form hydroxides and release hydrogen gas. The reactivity increases as you go down the group from lithium to potassium, with potassium being the most reactive.
Lithium and Potassium are very similar, however the are some differences. Potassium has more density because its atoms have more mass. Also potassium has a lower melting point and a lower boiling point. Potassium is also more reactive than Lithium because as you go down Group 1, the alkali metals become more reactive because the outer electron is more easily lost, because its further from the nucleus.
When potassium hydroxide is mixed with lithium, a single displacement reaction occurs. Lithium will replace potassium in the potassium hydroxide solution, resulting in the formation of lithium hydroxide and potassium metal as products. The reaction is represented by the following chemical equation: 2Li(s) + 2KOH(aq) -> 2LiOH(aq) + 2K(s).