Halogens are highly reactive and readily form salts with metals.
They are highly reactive metals, reacting with water (explosively) and air. In nature they simply would not last very long at all! i don't know. but i am in chemestry and i need to know. what i know so far is, that the are found in common substances. if you are a chemestry teacher you should know! :) plese get back to me by december 13th. i have a short exam then. but i also know that They are unstable in air and in water (moisture).
Elements that form salts by combining with metals are called halogens. All synthetic elements are radioactive. Elements that lie along the stair step line of the periodic table are metalloids.
All metals form salts.
Compounds, or minerals. The most common is the sodium chloride found in sea water. They are too reactive to be found as free elements.
No, cesium is an alkali metal. Metals do not react with one another. Cesium reacts with nonmetals and acids to form salts.
Halogens are highly reactive chemical elements.
All alkaline earth metals and their salts are reactive and they have a blue-print that identifies them as an alkaline earth metal but metals exist as metals, and salts as salts, with different structural compounds.
salts
Halogens
Yes, it is true, many useful salts are known.
They are highly reactive metals, reacting with water (explosively) and air. In nature they simply would not last very long at all! i don't know. but i am in chemestry and i need to know. what i know so far is, that the are found in common substances. if you are a chemestry teacher you should know! :) plese get back to me by december 13th. i have a short exam then. but i also know that They are unstable in air and in water (moisture).
beacuse it contain dissolve salts of calcium and magnesium salts and other heavy metals and it does not form lather with soap readily..
beacuse it contain dissolve salts of calcium and magnesium salts and other heavy metals and it does not form lather with soap readily..
Sodium (Na) is one of the most common elements on earth, but ironically, it does not exist elementally in nature. This is because it is highly reactive. It only exists in its many compounds, usually with non-metals in the form of salts.
Halogens are highly reactive, and don't lose their electrons easily. Halogens are all in group 17 of the periodic table, meaning they all have 17 valence electrons.
All types of metals form salts.
All metals form salts.