The are of course other alkali metals.
Alkali metals are: lithium, sodium, potassium, caesium, rubidium, francium.
You think probable to other alkali metals: Na, K, Cs, Rb.
the reaction would produce LiF Lithium Fluoride
Lithium is not a compound. It is element #3 on the Periodic Table of Elements.
There are two elements in the ionic compound Lithium Bromide: lithium and bromine.
This is an example of synthesis of a compound from its elements.
Almost every non metal except the elements in group 18 can make ionic bonds with lithium.
there is no reaction between these elements.
Lithium oxide is an ionic compound, further, all oxides of the group 1 elements are ionic.
Fluorine will replace bromine to produce the compound lithium fluoride in a single replacement reaction.
Yes. Lithium is an alkali metal and forms the same kinds of compounds as sodium and potassium. Example: LiF, lithium fluoride
It's the element Lithium, it's on the periodic table of the elements.
LiI has two elements in it, lithium and iodine. Lithium is an alkali metal and iodine is a halogen, so together they form an ionic salt. The correct name is the lithium iodide.