Neon is a noble gas, so it contains a full outer shell of 8 valence electrons and is extremely unreactive. Neon does not react with water, but is soluble at about 10.5 ml/kg at 20 degrees Celsius.
It is a gas. Gases are insoluble. So the answer is no.
neon is a single element. So there is no solute no solvent.
Solute and solvent are terms used in the case of mixture of two or more substances and not in the case of elements
Neon does not react with any other substances. It is chemically inert.
its insoluble
No. Neon does not react with anything.
Helium and neon have completely filled valence orbitals. The are stable and do not react with other elements. Hence they are considered to be novel or noble.
Well one is iron...
Yes. Neon is a noble gas - a gas that will not react with any other element. The reason for this is that in an atom of neon, all the electron levels ('shells') are filled leaving no opportunity for it to react with other elements. Other noble gases include Helium, argon, krypton, xenon and radon.
Noble gases, such as helium, neon, and argon, do not react with other elements and remain as single atoms. They have a full outer electron shell, making them stable and unreactive.
Neon is a nonreactive Nobel gas that has a full valance shell with 8 electrons in it. It does not " need " to either give or receive electrons into it's valance shell to complete it's octet, so it is inert.
Neon does not react with other elements.
Neon does not react with other elements.
No, it doesn't normally react with other elements.
No, not compared with neon.
Neon is an element, so it is just neon. It won't react with any other elements because it is so stable.
Neon does not react with water. It doesn't react with anything.
No, neon is not flammable. Flammability is a chemical property, and neon is inert because it's a noble gas and they don't react with any other elements.
Neon and argon are two other gases that are denser than helium and do not react easily with other elements.
Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon and Radon
If you are referring to a chemical reaction, neon does not react with anything. Neon is one of the so-called "Noble Gasses" or "Inert Gasses", which are very stable because their highest electron shell is full. Note that, despite their chemical stability, certain compounds can be formed from noble gasses in a laboratory setting. However, the mechanism that makes this possible doesn't work with the lighter noble gasses, like Helium and Neon, and no one has yet managed to create a truecompound from Neon.
Neon cannot form compounds at all, because it is an inert gas that doesn't react well with other elements.
The common commercial use of the neon gas is to make bulbs. It is used because it is an inert gas. It does not react with the other elements.