"very reactive"
It is a very reactive non-metal.
sodium has in his orbits or shell 2,8,1 so it is easier for it to loose this electron to reach his stability form and for that it is very reactive with most of the chemical elements otherwise the chlorine is very active specifically with Oxygen O2 which transform it to chlorites, chlorates, and perchlorate
Chlorine is very reactive.
Yes, chlorine is very reactive.
This element is a very reactive nonmetal as fluorine or chlorine.
Yes. It is very reactive.
No. They can have radically different properties from the elements they're formed from.Easy example: Sodium chloride. Sodium is a highly reactive nonmetal. Chlorine is a highly reactive nonmetal. They combine into a very nonreactive compound - table salt.
It is not true; many metals are very reactive and several nonmetals are nonreactive.
sodium has in his orbits or shell 2,8,1 so it is easier for it to loose this electron to reach his stability form and for that it is very reactive with most of the chemical elements otherwise the chlorine is very active specifically with Oxygen O2 which transform it to chlorites, chlorates, and perchlorate
Chlorine is very reactive.
Carbon is a very reactive nonmetal but not the most reactive.
Yes, chlorine is very reactive.
Plutonium is a very reactive metal: the Pauling electronegativity is 1,28.
This element is a very reactive nonmetal as fluorine or chlorine.
Yes. It is very reactive.
Yes, chlorine is a very reactive chemical element.
Gold is not very reactive, but platinum is more nonreactive; the electronegativity of gold is 1,93 but the electronegativity of platinum is 2,23.
Chlorine