Xenon is a noble gas and is generally non-reactive (chemically inert) under normal temperature and pressure. However under high temperature and pressure, it can form compounds (such as XeF2, XeF4, XeOF2, XeF6 etc) with high electronegative elements.
heterogeneous and homogeneous are words used to describe a system, not a single element. For example, with regards to catalysis you could have a homogeneous catalyst which means one that works in the same phase as the reactant (i.e. both solid or both liquid or both gas) or a heterogeneous catalyst, which works in a different phase to the reactant, so a solid catalyst for a gaseous reactant etc.
The balanced equation between cesium fluoride and xenon hexafluoride to produce cesium xenon heptaflouride is: CsF + XeF6 --> CsXeF7 From the balanced equation, 1 mole of CsF reacts with 1 mole of XeF6 to produce 1 mole of CsXeF7. Therefore, the limiting reactant is XeF6 and 10.0 mol of XeF6 will produce 10.0 mol of CsXeF7.
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 is a noble gas. I would think any compounds would be hard to make with using Xenon.
The Limiting Reactant is the reactant that runs out first in a reaction.
To determine the theoretical mass of xenon tetrafluoride that forms, first calculate the limiting reactant by converting the masses of xenon and fluorine to moles using their molar masses. Then, use the mole ratio from the balanced chemical equation (Xe + 2F2 -> XeF4) to find the limiting reactant. Finally, use the limiting reactant to calculate the theoretical mass of xenon tetrafluoride formed.
heterogeneous and homogeneous are words used to describe a system, not a single element. For example, with regards to catalysis you could have a homogeneous catalyst which means one that works in the same phase as the reactant (i.e. both solid or both liquid or both gas) or a heterogeneous catalyst, which works in a different phase to the reactant, so a solid catalyst for a gaseous reactant etc.
The balanced equation between cesium fluoride and xenon hexafluoride to produce cesium xenon heptaflouride is: CsF + XeF6 --> CsXeF7 From the balanced equation, 1 mole of CsF reacts with 1 mole of XeF6 to produce 1 mole of CsXeF7. Therefore, the limiting reactant is XeF6 and 10.0 mol of XeF6 will produce 10.0 mol of CsXeF7.
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 is a noble gas. I would think any compounds would be hard to make with using Xenon.
Xenon Difluoride
The Limiting Reactant is the reactant that runs out first in a reaction.
reactant
Xenon has a hexafluoride, which is xenon hexafluoride (XeF6). Argon does not have a stable hexafluoride compound.
Xenon has 54 electrons.
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.
Xenon Trioxide