Plutonium has valences from 2 to 7.
The valence number for Hydrogen is 1. This means that hydrogen typically forms one bond in chemical compounds.
as far as i know no. my science teacher told me that though. now for my question, What does plutonium bond with?
Uranium and plutonium can form alloys.
Plutonium forms ionic bonds.
The number of valence electrons determines the strength of the metallic bond. The more the stronger the bond will be.
The number of valence electrons determines an element's reactivity and ability to form chemical bonds. Elements with a full valence shell are stable and less likely to react, while elements with incomplete valence shells are more reactive and tend to form bonds to achieve stability.
This number is different for each anion.
Cations have fewer valence electrons than the number they started with. The number of valence electrons that cations have after bonding is dependent on the element they originate from.
Valence number is the number of chemical bonds that an element can form- these bonds may be covalent (sharing of electrons) or ionic (transfer of electrons). A valence number of 1 means that the element forms just one bond, for example sodium -- forms NaCl - with an ionic bond; hydrogen forms HCl - with a covalent bond.
Plutonium doesn't react with carbon dioxide at r.m.
A covalent bond is the union of two atoms, in which one atom removes electron from the other to complete its valence number.
This depends on the number of valence electrons.