It catches fire in air and produce super oxides
It catches fire in air and produce super oxides
Yes, rubidium has many chemical compounds.
When rubidium is put in acid, it reacts and forms rubidium ions and hydrogen gas. This reaction is violent and can release a significant amount of heat and gas. Precautions should be taken when handling this reaction as it can be hazardous.
how is the reactivity for ptassium
Two ions are lost.
water
Rubidium reacts violently (and does not explode,) to produce Rubidium Hydroxide and Hydrogen.
Rubidium and oxygen typically form an ionic bond, where rubidium loses an electron to oxygen, resulting in the formation of rubidium cations and oxygen anions that are attracted to each other due to their opposite charges.
Rubidium hydroxide, RbOH.
When rubidium reacts with chloride, rubidium chloride is formed. This is an ionic compound where rubidium loses an electron to form a +1 cation, and chloride gains that electron to form a -1 anion. The resulting compound has a white color and is highly soluble in water.
Rubidium is a typical group 1 alkali metal and is highly reactive, and similar to sodium and potassium.
Rubidium (Rb) can react with many things such as hydrogen because rubidium has one spare electron 2, 8, 18, 8, 1 and hydrogen has only one outer electron so hydrogen in water will reactvigorously with rubidium as hydrogen is desperate to gain one electron and rubidium is desperate to lose one electron and when these bond they form an ion.