In view of the fact that Xenon is a gas, I would suggest that it is not particularly hard.
No. It is very rare but not hard to produce.
Xenon is a noble gas. I would think any compounds would be hard to make with using Xenon.
No, it is relatively straightforward.
LG does manufacture a hard plastic cover for the LG Xenon. Aside from hard plastic cover, LG also offers a soft silicon cover, a paper cover and a titanium cover.
not really hard but the keyboard has Cramped keys , below is complete specifications for LG Xenon.Good Luck!
When you mix fluorine with xenon, the fluorine can react with xenon to form xenon fluorides, such as xenon tetrafluoride (XeF4) or xenon hexafluoride (XeF6). These xenon fluorides are generally unstable and highly reactive compounds.
Xenon Difluoride
Xenon has a hexafluoride, which is xenon hexafluoride (XeF6). Argon does not have a stable hexafluoride compound.
Yes, xenon can form monatomic ions, known as xenon ions. Xenon can lose electrons to form positively charged xenon ions or gain electrons to form negatively charged xenon ions.
You don't have to be worried about xenon's purity, since it is a noble gas and even though its compounds with fluorine had been reported, these compounds are unstable. Therefore, you can extract xenon in pure form without worrying about contamination.However, xenon is extremely rare and hard to extract from any source. You can liquefy fin air to the liquid state (liquid oxygen, nitrogen and noble gases). Here you can find traces of xenon gas and others like krypton, argon... To extract xenon out of the other substances, you can either use silica gel or distillation to get pure xenon with a minimum level of other noble gases. Another source is from mineral spring, but it's also a hard job.
Xenon has 54 electrons.
Xenon Trioxide