No, neon is a noble gas. All noble gases are very inert. Thus, neon does not react with water, or most substances for that matter.
Lithium is more reactive than Neon.
Neon is not reactive. It is inert.
neon is a noble gas that will not react with anything -- any other element except helium is more reactive than neon! With lithium, quite a reactive metal, it is certainly more reactive than neon.
It is not reactive at all. It will not combine with other elements.
The elements from most reactive to least reactive are: Chlorine, Oxygen, Argon, and Neon.
The elements from most reactive to least reactive are: Chlorine, Oxygen, Argon, and Neon.
The noble gases: Helium, neon, etc.
Neon is not reactive at all because it has a full p sublevel of electrons (8 valence electrons total). This is a very stable configuration, and as a result, neon is neither a reactant nor a product in normal chemical reactions.
No, they are not likely to bond. Neon has a complete octet and is not reactive.
they are stable
No, not really. Neon is a Noble Gas meaning it has all the shells in its atom filled so it doesn't really share, gain, or lose electrons. Study has shown it could possibly combine with Fluorine.
Yes, Neon is a noble gas (its outer shell of electrons is full) and does not react with anything, while Chlorine is a halide and is very reactive.