No. Neon, as a noble gas, does not react with ANYTHING.
Certainly nitrogen can react with oxygen. The resulting compounds are the oxides of nitrogen. These are often components of smog.
Because Neon is a noble gas (all of the electron shells are filled) it is very unlikely that Neon will react. However, there are compounds with noble gases such as Xenon Tetraflouride (XeF4)
Not by itself. It will only react if there are other substances involved which would alter neon. Neon is a noble gas and therefore rarely reacts with anything at all.
neon does not react with acid
Neon does not react with oxygen and water.
yes
no
200
limiting reactant
reactant substances usually come from groups 1 and 7 on the periodic table as it is easy to gain or lose 1 electron
Neon is one of the noble gases - helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon. Gas discharge lights, commonly called neon lights, will produce different colors depending on which gas is used. Neon itself produces an orange light. The Wikipedia entry ' Noble Gas' has a nice illustration near the end showing the colors produced by each of the above gases
Neon (Ne) belongs to Family 18, The Noble Gasses.
Neon is not reactive at all because it has a full p sublevel of electrons (8 valence electrons total). This is a very stable configuration, and as a result, neon is neither a reactant nor a product in normal chemical reactions.
The Limiting Reactant is the reactant that runs out first in a reaction.
reactant
Sugar can be both a reactant and a product.
sulfur is a reactant
Reactant
reactant
The Limiting Reactant is the reactant that runs out first in a reaction.
Neon (Ne, #10) has 8 electrons in its outermost shell. This is a very stable arrangement of electrons; in fact, many other elements either lose or gain electrons in order to achieve this same arrangement that neon already has. For that reason, neon is inert, meaning it does not react. It is neither the reactant nor the product in chemical reactions.
Using an excess of another reactant limits a reactant.
Water is a reactant in photosythesis that is a liquid.
You didn't say what the reactant is? Example 2NaCl â 2Na + Cl2 reactant is on the left so it's NaCl So the state is solid or salt to be specific.