The chemistry of francium is not known but francium is considered the most reactive metal.
Fluorine and francium are two elements that are never found as elements in nature due to their high reactivity. Fluorine readily reacts with almost all elements, while francium is extremely radioactive and decays quickly into other elements.
No. Halogens combine readily with sodium
The Group 1 elements have a specific family name - alkali metals. All the alkali metals are silvery solids with low densities and low melting points. These elements increase in their reactivity, or tendency to combine with other substances, as you more from top to bottom on the periodic table.Alkali metals are found in many items. Lithium batteries are used in cameras. Sodium chloride is common table sat. Sodium and potassium, dietary requirements, are found in small quantities in potatoes and bananas.I'd predict that francium would combine less readily than cesium.______________Well, actually, Francium is a radioactive element, and it's a pretty unstable one at that; Alkali metals tend to explode somewhat when placed in water.Cesium then will explode in water, and Francium will, undoubtedly, undergo radioactive decay into Radium, and when that's placed into water...To answer the question :Francium will most definitely combine readily (if not violently) with water more than Cesium.
It is supposed that francium react with water more easy than any other element.
Francium is a soft, highly reactive metal. It is the most unstable of all the naturally occurring elements due to its large atomic size and low electronegativity. It readily reacts with other elements, so it is typically stored in inert gas to prevent this.
Potassium can not combine with noble gases, such as helium, neon, and argon, as they are already stable and do not readily form compounds with other elements.
The Inert Gases of Group 0 rarely combine with other elements as they are (exc. Radon) extremely unreactive. The Inert Gases are:HeliumNeonArgonKryptonXenon(Radon)
Yes, copper readily combines with several other elements. Combined with zinc it is brass, combined with tin it is bronze. It combines with many other elements including oxygen and sulfur.
Rubidium is a typical group 1 alkali metal and is highly reactive, and similar to sodium and potassium.
You will get water and argon. Hydrogen an oxygen will readily and violently combine to form water. Argon is an inert gas, and so will not combine with other elements.
Yes, it can, and it combines with many other elements. The most common example is sodium chloride, ordinary table salt.
Yes, rubidium has many chemical compounds.