No, cesium is an alkali metal. Metals do not react with one another.
Cesium reacts with nonmetals and acids to form salts.
Yes. It has the highest atomic weight of the stable alkali metals. (All known isotopes of the only known heavier alkali metal, francium, are radioactive.)
No, least reactive element.
They combine directly to form salts. E.g. lithium + fluorine -- > lithium fluoride if i am not mistaken..
Alkali metals exist only as salts.
here r the possisble answers: both atoms lose 1 electron a covalent bond forms metal gains an electron and the nonmetal loses an electron metal loses an electron and non metal gains an electron
Bcoz, alkali metals ve an unpaired electron in the 'ns' orbital, which gets filld wen it iz ionically bonded...
because poo is black
No, Acids react with metals to form salts.
They combine directly to form salts. E.g. lithium + fluorine -- > lithium fluoride if i am not mistaken..
Alkali metals exist only as salts.
No. Metals react with nonmetals or acids to produce salts. Salts can also form when acids react with bases.
here r the possisble answers: both atoms lose 1 electron a covalent bond forms metal gains an electron and the nonmetal loses an electron metal loses an electron and non metal gains an electron
Usually they react to form a slat and water.
Li, Na, K, NH4
These salts are weak electrolytes: examples are acetates, formates etc. of alkali metals.
Those salts which can dissolve in water.because water is a solvent and salts are solute.
The products of the reactions are ionic salts.
Halogens, such as chlorine, iodine or fluorine.
Bcoz, alkali metals ve an unpaired electron in the 'ns' orbital, which gets filld wen it iz ionically bonded...