The Noble Gas group, which is Group 18.
Noble gases (or group 18 elements)
Unreactive
The most unreactive elements, called the noble gases, are found in the group 8 of the period table.
The noble gases are the most stable unreactive elements on the periodic table, they are helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, radon
Noble gases (or group 18 elements)
The "Noble gases" of group VIII are unreactive, because they are stable, due to their electron arrangements. If an atom has a full outer shell, it is "happy" and will not bond with other atoms.
The Noble Gases, group 18
Group VIII, the noble gases.
Argon is in Group 18, the unreactive Noble Gases.
Inert means unreactive, and most of these gases never react.
In short, an element's valence shell is full and most stable when it contains eight electrons (this stability is the reason that the noble gases are so unreactive).
Unreactive
The most unreactive elements, called the noble gases, are found in the group 8 of the period table.
i believe you are talking about the noble gases.........they are unreactive because they already have a stable electron configuration and need no more......the reason most substances react is because they are unstable a and need more valence electrons.....
The noble gases, column 18 in a wide form periodic table.
Correct.
The noble gases are the most stable unreactive elements on the periodic table, they are helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, radon
Noble gases (or group 18 elements)