Yes, you can make silicon dioxide out of silicon.
because the outer valence is incomplete.
Thorium can react with many other elements: oxygen, silicon, carbon, nitrogen, sulfur, selenium, halogens, etc.
Being a reactive chemical element plutonium can react with the majority of other chemical elements as: oxygen, hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, sulfur, silicon, phosphorus, halogens, etc.
Silicon will react easily with oxygen (to form the network solid SiO2), hydrogen (to form silane gas), and the halogens to form silicon halides.
Plutonium is a reactive metal and can react with the majority of other chemical elements: hydrogen, oxygen, halogens, carbon, sulfur, nitrogen, selenium, boron, phosphorous, silicon, etc.
carbon is one of them, they are in the same column
because the outer valence is incomplete.
Thorium can react with many other elements: oxygen, silicon, carbon, nitrogen, sulfur, selenium, halogens, etc.
what happens to the properties of elements when they react with each other element
Being a reactive chemical element plutonium can react with the majority of other chemical elements as: oxygen, hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, sulfur, silicon, phosphorus, halogens, etc.
Yes it does react strongly when bonding with other elements
Neon does not react with other elements.
Neon does not react with other elements.
Lead, magnesium, aluminum, and silicon are different elements, each containing an unique number of protons in the nucleus as well as different numbers of valence shell electrons that influence how they react with other elements and form bonds. Elements are also classified into types depending on their properties and position in the periodic table. Magnesium is an alkaline earth metal, which are soft and silver coloured. Lead, on the other hand, is a heavy metal. Aluminum is classified more ambiguously under 'other metals', and silicon is a metalloid.
Elements react with other elements based on the number of electrons in their outer shell, also called valence electrons.
Silicon will react easily with oxygen (to form the network solid SiO2), hydrogen (to form silane gas), and the halogens to form silicon halides.
Selenium react with majority of other chemical elements.