Fluorine is separated by electrolysis. It's when you pass an electric current through a solution with ions which then splits the bond of the elements.
helium is chemically inert and is not found in any materials
It doesn't interact that fast with other elements
Fluorine is too strongly electronegative to donate electrons to any other atom.
All of the other alkali metals, found below lithium in periodic table column 1, would have this property.
Fluorine has higher electron affinity than any other element.
hounestly i have no idea
it is
It has coal
Hydrogen and oxygen make up water. Found in processed water can be fluorine and chlorine.
Fluorine (F) has only this name.
== == WHAT IS FLUORINE? Fluorine is an univalent poisonous gaseous halogen, it is pale yellow-green and it is the most chemically reactive and electronegative of all the elements. Fluorine readily forms compounds with most other elements, even with the noble gases krypton, xenon and radon. It is so reactive that glass, metals, and even water, as well as other substances, burn with a bright flame in a jet of fluorine gas. In aqueous solution, fluorine commonly occurs as the fluoride ion F-. Fluorides are compounds that combine fluoride with some positively charged counterpart.
helium is chemically inert and is not found in any materials
he found gold and other materials
By ore processes
I don't have a clue.
Vacuole
planet, asteroids and other materials