No practical applications. Francium is used only for scientific studies.
Francium has not applications and the oxide cannot be prepared.
Uses of francium are limited to only scientific research.This is mostly because it is difficult to find or make and it has a very short half life (it decays quickly into other elements).Francium (and not fracium) is used only in specialized laboratories for reseach in chemistry in physics.With a half life of only 22 minutes, francium is not only completely useless, it is also not likely that anyone could gather enough of it together to do anything meaningfull with it.Francium has only some rare applications in research laboratories; see the link.Unfortunately, the uses for the radioactive element Francium are limited to only scientific research. This is mostly because it is difficult to find or make and it has a very short half life (it decays quickly).However this element is the one element that is the most reactive to water because it is the most reactive alkali metal, a family of metals that all react to water. This basically means if you drop a large sample of Francium into a tub of water it will explode.there is no known uses for francium.there is not much of Francium around, and what there is or is made does not last for long (disintegrates into lighter elements in a few hours). probably it is being investigated or used in some physics experiments somewhere and it seems unlikely to show up as a food additive at your grocery store anytime soon.
Not known today but probably francium don't burn.
This property was not measured on francium.
Francium is not a transition metal.
Francium hasn't today practical applications; francium is used in laboratories only for scientific studies.
Francium hasn't applications.
Francium hasn't applications.
Francium has not now practical applications; francium is used only for scientific studies.
Francium hasn't practical applications; it is only a subject of scientific research.
Francium hasn't practical applications; it is only a subject of scientific research.
Francium hasn't practical applications; it is only a subject of scientific research.
Francium has not applications and the oxide cannot be prepared.
Francium hasn't practical applications; it is only a subject of scientific research.
As francium is a chemical element, it is made up of protons, neutrons and electrons.
Francium is not a commercial product and hasn't practical applications today.
No, due to its instability and rarity there are no commercial applications for francium. It has been used for research purposes.