Elements which have their valency electrons in the p sub shell belong to this. Elements of groups 13,14,15,16,17,18 are in p block.
Oxygen and sulfur belong to block p on the periodic table. Block p elements are characterized by their electron configurations ending in the p orbital.
The majority of the elements in the p-block are non-metals.
The representative elements belong to the s-block and p-block in the periodic table. These elements are also known as the main group elements and are found in groups 1, 2, and 13-18. They have properties like forming ionic compounds and covalent bonds easily compared to transition metals.
The s block and p block elements are located in the main group elements of the periodic table. The s block elements are in groups 1 and 2, while the p block elements are in groups 13 to 18. These elements are located on the left and right sides of the periodic table, respectively.
4: the s-block, the p-block, the d-block, and the f-block. there is an theoratical g-block but its not counted because its theoratical lol.
The block in the periodic table that consists of elements in groups 3A through 8A is the p-block.
p-block elements have partially filled p-subshell. It is not completely filled.
s-block elements: groups 1 and 2 p-block elements: groups 13 to 18
Main group elements include elements (except hydrogen) in groups 1 and 2 (s-block), and groups 13 to 18 (p-block).
Halogens belong to the nonmetals. It is in the middle top block of the Periodic Table. The other nonmetals are the noble gasses.
The s, p, d, f block realte to the filling of the outer shell orbitals. Group 1 and 2 are the s block. Groups 13-18 the p block, the transition metals the d block and the lanthanides and actinides the f block.
P-block active elements are highly reactive and tend to readily participate in chemical reactions. In contrast, p-block inactive elements are relatively unreactive and stable, requiring strong conditions for them to react with other substances. The reactivity difference is due to the number of valence electrons and how easily they can be shared or transferred in chemical reactions.