noble gases are elements and generally do not form cations due to the presence of completely filled valence shells.
The most stable cation in chemistry is the noble gas cation, which is formed when a noble gas atom loses an electron to become positively charged.
The element, Argon is neither a cation nor an anion. It is one of the Noble gases.
I don't know about radon, but xenon gas, also a noble gas, is an anion when it makes compounds, as rarely as it does.
The noble gases are usually inert, because their electron shells are full. The further away an electron is the higher its energy and the less of a hold the protons have one it. If a highly electro-negative element comes in contact with a noble gas in high heat, the noble gas can lose an electron. Thus the noble gas becomes a cation. The cation noble gas is free to from a ionic bond with a anion.
Linda Gase was born in Saginaw, in Michigan, USA.
No! Fluorine is the most "ignoble" gas, because it will bond to almost any other element, and chlorine is not far behind in its indiscriminate reactivity.
Noble gases are considered noble because they are stable and have a full outer electron shell, making them very unreactive. This full outer shell makes them less likely to form chemical bonds with other elements.
They have one valence electron. If this electron is lost, the atoms form cations with the electronic configuration of the nearest noble gas.
"Gases."
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Joey Gase was born on February 8, 1993, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, USA.
Yes, but that is extremely rare as it is a noble gas