Technetium can form oxides, chlorides, bromides, fluorides, sulfides, selenides, tellurides, carbides, pertechnetates etc.
Technetium can form oxides, chlorides, bromides, fluorides, sulfides, selenides, tellurides, carbides, pertechnetates etc.
Technetium is not abundant. Compounds of Tc are most used.
technetium forms with other elements to make compounds
Examples of technetium compounds are: TcO2, Tc2O7, HTcO4, TcS2, Tc2S7, Tc2(CO)10, Tc6C, TcF6, TcF5, TcCl6, TcCl4, TcBr4 etc.
Technetium is in the period 5 of the periodic table.
Technetium is found in both in a compound and pure forms
Technetium is an element and therefore does not contain any compounds! If the questioner meant to ask, "What are 3 compounds of technetium", that is a different question. The following compounds are listed on a web site with no obvious copyright notices:Technetium hexafluoride: TcF6Technetium pentafluoride: TcF5Technetium hexachloride: TcCl6Technetium tetrachloride: TcCl4Technetium tetrabromide: TcBr4Technetium dioxide: TcO2Ditechnetium heptoxide: Tc2O7Technetium disulphide: TcS2Ditechnetium decacarbonyl: Tc2(CO)10
Technetium is not a naturally-occurring element; it was created in a laboratory.
Technetium is a man made element; natural technetium exist only in ultra traces in uranium deposits.
Technetium react with oxygen, halogens, oxygen, sulfur, selenium, tellurium, boron, carbon etc. and can form alloys with metals.
No, Technetium does no occur naturally on earth except in trace amounts in molybdenum deposits.
Technetium exist in infinitesimal traces in some uranium ores. Being radioactive and unstable technetium was lost from the Earth by decay.