No. Common examples would be CO2 dissolved in water as carbonate soft drinks.
Acetylene gas is dissolved in acetone in industrial cylinders, thus eliminating the dangerous operation of compressing acetylene. (If compressed it will explode!)
Halogens are extremely reactive, noble gases are very unreactive. All noble gases are gases; only F and Cl are gases.
All noble gases have only one type of atom
This is the family of noble gases (group 18).
!. Noble gases can be mixed with other gases. 2. Noble gases are unreactive (only a limited number of compounds are known today) because the valence electron shell is completely filled.
Helium has only 2 valence electrons. The rest noble gases have eight.
Noble gases have completely filled orbitals / energy levels. They generally have 8 valence electrons (helium has only 2 valence electrons) and have stable electronic configuration.
Halogens can be gaseous, liquid or solid; noble gases are only gases.Halogens are very chemical reactive elements; only some compounds of noble gases are known.
Halogens can be gaseous, liquid or solid; noble gases are only gases.Halogens are very chemical reactive elements; only some compounds of noble gases are known.
Halogens can be gaseous, liquid or solid; noble gases are only gases.Halogens are very chemical reactive elements; only some compounds of noble gases are known.
Halogens can be gaseous, liquid or solid; noble gases are only gases.Halogens are very chemical reactive elements; only some compounds of noble gases are known.
All noble gases have 8 valence electrons. Helium has only 2.
Noble gases usually exist as monatomic (single atom) gases because they have a stable electron configuration and are inert, meaning they do not easily react with other elements. This makes them chemically unreactive and often found in their elemental form in nature.