The chalcogens are the chemical elements in group 16 of the periodic table, which includes Oxygen.
Oxygen is in the upper right side of the periodic table.
No, glycerin is not part of the periodic table. Glycerin is a compound composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms and does not appear as an individual element on the periodic table.
In the periodic table oxygen is found in the 16th group (colomn): the calcogens group
Yes. It's called The Periodic Table of Elements.
The Periodic table contains only elements, however, HO4 is a compound and hence has no place on the period table.
The non-metals on the periodic table are located on the right side, up to the right diagonal line. These elements include hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, phosphorus, sulfur, chlorine, and noble gases like helium, neon, and argon.
Nitrogen, oxygen, and neon are all elements on the periodic table. They are all gases at room temperature and are part of the same group/family on the periodic table, known as the noble gases.
Gadolinium is in the middle of the lanthanide sequence on the periodic table. (The lanthanide sequence is the skinny part at the bottom that, in some periodic tables, is put off to the side.)
Selenium and Oxygen are part of the family on the periodic table. Columns=families, and rows= periods. Oxygen and selemiun also have the same amount of electrons on their outershell. All this can be found on any website with a periodic table like webelements.com, or in a chemistry book.
No. Water is made of 2 elements (Hydrogen and Oxygen). It is a compound. It is refreshing.
Anything to the right of the step-like line.
No. A Christmas tree is not part of the Periodic Table of Elements.