No, calcium is not in the halogen group. The halogen group is made up of fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine.
On the periodic table, fluorine and chlorine belong in group 17. This group is often called the halogen gases.
Iodine belongs to group 17. It is in the family called the halogens.
Phosphorus is not a halogen. Only the elements of group 7 are halogens (fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine).
Group 17. Also known as the Halogen Family.
Halogen
Calcium chloride contains an alkali earth metal (calcium, a group 2 element) and a halogen (chlorine). There is no alkali metal. Alkali metals are group 1 elements.
The halogen that binds quickly with calcium is fluoride
Calcium is a group 2 metal, with the symbol Ca, whereas fluorine is a halogen (group 7) and goes around in pairs (Fl2)
The group which is known as the Halogen is group 7.
Neither Potassium nor Calcium is a halogen since both are metals.
No, calcium is an alkaline earth metal. The halogens are in the second column from the right on the periodic table.
Group 7A is the Halogen group. It is sometimes also called Group 17, depending on how the periodic table is labeled.
group 17
group 17
The halogen elements in the periodic table are found in Group 17:Flourine(F),Chlorine(Cl),Bromine(Br) and Astatine(At).
No. Nitrogen is in group 15 not in group 17.
Group 17