Fluorine and oxygen, but only at exteme conditions. This has only been a forced bonding under a controled chemical lab. These compounds are very unstable and do not exist in nature.
xenon is stable compound.......
Covalent bonds.
It forms covalent bonds.
Xenon is a noble gas in with the electrone of outermost orbit are balanced than the xenon cannot make ionic bond with another element such as Oxygen because if it make an ionic bond than the electron of the outer most orbit are unstable therefore it make an covalent bond with oxygen to fill the outer most unbalance electron of oxygen by sharing electron to form (xenon oxide) (xenon dioxide) and also with floride to form (xenon difloride) etc.
Yes , Flourine
xenon is stable compound.......
Xenon is a noble gas so it doesn't bond, but radium bonds pretty well Xenon is the only noble gas that bonds with a other element.
Xenon makes covalent bonds with halogens and oxygen.
It forms covalent bonds.
Covalent bonds.
Mostly covalent bonds.
Xenon is a noble gas in with the electrone of outermost orbit are balanced than the xenon cannot make ionic bond with another element such as Oxygen because if it make an ionic bond than the electron of the outer most orbit are unstable therefore it make an covalent bond with oxygen to fill the outer most unbalance electron of oxygen by sharing electron to form (xenon oxide) (xenon dioxide) and also with floride to form (xenon difloride) etc.
Yes , Flourine
Van Der Walls
I don't think any element can easily , or even bond with Xenon. Xenon is a noble gas with enough electrons on the outermost shell, therefore it exist alone like other noble gas such as helium, argon in the same group: Group 0.
With difficulty but yes it does - particularly Fluorine and oxygen.
The number of covalent bonds depends on the compound it makes. Xenon can make maximum of six covalent bond (as in XeF6) and minimum of 2 as in (XeF2).