No uranium is not chemically active
Fluorine
The most chemically active element is the halogen known as fluorine. Be
I think the closest to uranium chemically is lanthanum, but you might want to check periodic table to be sure, it would be right above it.
Since it is at the heavy end of the alkaline earth metals, radium would be highly reactive. It would react sponaneosly with air and vigorously, if not violently, with water. Radium's radioactivity, however, makes such experiments too dangerous to perform.
Without its oxygen content the Earth's atmosphere would be composed almost entirely of nitrogen and would be chemically inert; oxygen causes the atmosphere to be chemically active (and breathable by humans).
Has had most of the uranium-235 (an isotope of uranium)) separated out of it.
No. Neon is chemically inert and generally doesn't react with uranium
Covalent Bond. Chemically Active. The only elements that are inert are group 18, or 8A.
Uranium form chemical compounds with the majority of other chemical elements.
Active
Uranium is not a mineral, but a metal. For more info, go to periodictable.com
Uranium is extracted as minerals from mines and after this is chemically prepared to uranium metal or oxides.The world production of uranium is now approx. 55 000 t.
It is possible but this reaction was not studied.
In the industry it is called Hex. Chemically UF6 - Uranium Hexafluoride.
i am pretty sure that when an atom is chemically active its outer valence shell is not full meaning it is able to form different types of bonds with different elements.
Active. VERY active. Sometimes, EXPLOSIVELY active.
Metals in group one are chemically active as compared to the elements in group three and two. Elements like sodium, potassium, chlorine and fluorine are some of the chemically active elements.