Iron, lithium, and neon do not actually mix, nor do they chemically react with each other (although iron and lithium react with other elements such as oxygen). Iron is much denser than lithium, so if you poured these two metals into a container in their molten state, the lithium would just float on top of the iron. And Neon is an inert gas.
lithium
Lithium carbonate + Iron(II) iodide ----> Lithium iodide + Iron(II) carbonateLi2CO3 + FeI2 ----> 2 LiI + FeCO3
No, neon already has 8 electrons in its outer shell. Why would it need more?
Nothing will happen as neon is chemically inert.
Hydrogen has the smallest atomic radius - 25 pm.
Lithium.
Lithium is more reactive than Neon.
Neon is chemically inert and doesnt combine with lithium
lithium
No. Lithium is an element with atomic number 3 (or 3 protons) and neon is an element with atomic number 10 (or 10 protons). Both are not same.
No. Neon is lighter than iron
Lithium.
Lithium , carbon and neon have two shells. Hence they are placed in period 2 of the periodic table.
Lithium carbonate + Iron(II) iodide ----> Lithium iodide + Iron(II) carbonateLi2CO3 + FeI2 ----> 2 LiI + FeCO3
What will happen when you mix lithium and soma
neon is a noble gas that will not react with anything -- any other element except helium is more reactive than neon! With lithium, quite a reactive metal, it is certainly more reactive than neon.
Err, Neon, in an isotope mix.