No. Chlorine is a main group element, but is a nonmetal in the halogen family (group 17).
Chlorine is a Halogen. Along with the rest of the elements in the group. Mostly ending with ine. Bromine and Fluorine for example.
Group I metals will have the most violent reaction.
no chlorine is a non-metal
No, metal-free does not have the ability to remove chlorine from water. Metal-free is typically a product used to sequester or bind metal ions in the water to prevent staining or other issues. To remove chlorine from water, you would need to use a chlorine neutralizer or a water filtration system that is designed to remove chlorine.
Chlorine is the non-metal which is used for the purification of water
Chlorine is a non-metal. It is placed in group-17 of the periodic table.
Chlorine is a non-metal. It is found in group 7 of the periodic table of elements and has electronic configuration [Ne] 3s2 3p5.
Chlorine is a Halogen. Along with the rest of the elements in the group. Mostly ending with ine. Bromine and Fluorine for example.
CuCl2 is an ionic compound with two elements, copper and chlorine. Chlorine is a halogen, part of Group XVII, and copper is a transition metal, of Group XI.
Group I metals will have the most violent reaction.
Neither. Aluminium is a group 13 metal or a main group metal.
Chlorine is a nonmetal. Do you think they put metal in swimming pool water?
all elements that are not main group elements are metals, and since rhenium is not a main group element, it is a metal. Hope this helped!
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.
Chlorine is a non-metal. It is found in group 7 of the Periodic Table of elements and has electronic configuration [Ne] 3s2 3p5.
Chlorine is a non-metal. It is found in group 7 of the Periodic Table of elements and has electronic configuration [Ne] 3s2 3p5.
The metal is Sodium (Na) and the halogen is Chlorine (Cl) - thus table salt is NaCl.