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Strontium and iodine are very different chemical elements.
Any other halides - fluorine, chlorine, iodine or astatine
Bromine and iodine, which are in the same group as chlorine, have similar type of chemical characteristics.
Chlorine ,Bromine and Iodine have same chemical properties as Fluorine.
Fluorine, Bromine, and Iodine have similar properties to chlorine
Strontium and iodine are very different chemical elements.
Any other halides - fluorine, chlorine, iodine or astatine
Bromine and iodine, which are in the same group as chlorine, have similar type of chemical characteristics.
Chlorine ,Bromine and Iodine have same chemical properties as Fluorine.
Elements similar to chlorine will be located in the same group(17).
boron
Fluorine, Bromine, and Iodine have similar properties to chlorine
Fluorine, Bromine and Iodine
Fluorine, chlorine (the symbol is capital C, lowercase L), bromine and iodine are all halogens with similar chemical properties. Elements with similar chemical properties appear in the same columns, called groups, in the periodic table. All of the previous elements are in group 17.
Flourine belongs to a class of elements called Halogens, which are similar in their chemical and physical properties. The other elements of this group are Chlorine, Bromine, Iodine, Astatine and Ununseptium. Astatine, however, is not considered to be a true halogen since it is radioactive in nature and Ununseptium is a synthetic element.
Because they have similar chemical properties. The reason they have similar chemical properties is because they have the same number of valence electrons. The differences are caused by them having different masses and because the larger elements have their valence electrons "screened" more from the nucleus by electrons in lower energy levels.
Florine and iodine fall under a class of compounds called halogens. There are currently 5 known halogens to man :-FlorineChlorineBromineIodine,andAstatine.They exhibit similar properties because they have a deficiency of 1 electron in its outermost shell making them highly electronegative. During reactions involving metals they have the tendency to bleach metals i.e. bond themselves with metals via ionic bonds which becomes covalent in higher periods. Iodine is highly covalent because it can react with other halogens forming compunds like IF or IF7.