Helium is the only perfectly inert element, although there are several other inert elements which can be made to react with fluorine only with great difficulty, by the use of high temperature and pressure.
Halogens are the most reactive elements that exist. They react with everything.
Neon, Ne as it is a noble gas element
they react in air by oxidising.
air water halogens acids and bases
Halogens combine with sodium to form salt that we eat.....
Cadmium does react with oxygen, acids, and the halogens. The acids it reacts with is sulfuric acid. Cadmium does react with water.
Plutonium react with hydrogen, oxygen, halogens, carbon, nitrogen, silicon, sulfur, phosphorous, acids, etc. Plutonium is a reactive metal.
they react in air by oxidising.
halogens react to form halides
halogens generally cause depletion of ozone. They react with ozone to deplete it.
air water halogens acids and bases
Protactinium is a reactive metal; protactinium react with water vapours, acids, oxygen, halogens,etc.
Halogens combine with sodium to form salt that we eat.....
Halogens are reactive and they react with noble gases because they are not satisfied with the numbers of electrons they've got
Radium react with halogens (F, Cl, Br, I), oxygen, nitrogen, water, etc.
Oxygen does not react more slowly than all of the halogens, just some of them. Plus, the rate of a reaction depends on its nature, not just whether oxygen or a halogen reacts. when the halogens do react faster, this is because they only need one electron to have a stable configuration, whereas oxygen needs two.
The reactivity of halogens decreases down the group, which means Fluorine is the most reactive halogens as it is the most electronegative elements among the halogens, and also the Periodic Table.
Actinium can react with halogens, oxygen, hydrogen.
Radium react with halogens (F, Cl, Br, I), oxygen, nitrogen, water, etc.