Yes.
Flame colours come from alkai metals reacting with salts to produce different colours.
Alkali metals are in the first group of the periodic table of Mendeleev: lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, caesium, francium.
well basically they all have very unstable atoms and having unstable atoms. They also have only 1 outer electron and only then is an atom happy when it has a full outer shell.. This means that the alkali metals want to get rid of their extra electron and therefore means they would be very reactive with the group 7 metals. Hope this helps :D
The Alkali Metals are: -lithium -sodium -potassium -rubidium -cesium -francium These metals are silvery solids with low densities and melting points.
alkai metals
Alkai metals are in group 1 on the periodic table
Yes.
the s-block elements are highly reactive elements, on the other hand, d-block elements are less reactive than the alkai metals and the alkai-earth metals. some are so reactive that they do not easily form compounds.
alkai metals, alkaline earth metals, lanthanoids, actinoids, transistion metals, poor metals, other non-metals, noble gases.
Li Na K Rb Cs Fr (hope this is help)
Flame colours come from alkai metals reacting with salts to produce different colours.
Alkali metals are in the first group of the periodic table of Mendeleev: lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, caesium, francium.
weird weird
No it is called neutralization
well basically they all have very unstable atoms and having unstable atoms. They also have only 1 outer electron and only then is an atom happy when it has a full outer shell.. This means that the alkali metals want to get rid of their extra electron and therefore means they would be very reactive with the group 7 metals. Hope this helps :D
Yes, even more than several acids.