The element is common, however; this does not imply a particular molecule is common- such as diatomic fluorine.
Fluorine.
Fluorine
Fluorine is an element, s an atom of fluorine contains only one element - fluorine. However, the fluorine molecule consists of two atoms of fluorine.
fluorine reacts with water veryviciously the chemical equation for it is fluorine + oxygen = fluorine oxide
no
The element is common, however; this does not imply a particular molecule is common- such as diatomic fluorine.
The fluorine isotope differs from the fluorine ion because the fluorine isotope has a different number of neutrons from normal, while the ion has a different number of electrons. An isotope will have the same number of electrons as its atomic number (the number of protons), while the ion will add (more common in the case of fluorine) or subtract (very rare in the case of fluorine) electrons to the atom. The only thing they are similar in is the number of protons they have, which are the same.
First of all, all halogens are non-metals. Secondly, the most reactive is fluorine, which reacts to nearly everything, hence it is rare. After fluorine comes chlorine, then bromine and iodine.
Yes, however, that is an extremely rare chemical combination. Krypton difluoride is a very powerful oxidizing substance
Fluorine.
Fluorine
Fluorine is an element, s an atom of fluorine contains only one element - fluorine. However, the fluorine molecule consists of two atoms of fluorine.
Fluorine is an element and barium is also an element. There is no fluorine in barium and not barium in fluorine.
fluorine reacts with water veryviciously the chemical equation for it is fluorine + oxygen = fluorine oxide
Fluorine seems a likely answer
The valency of fluorine is -1.