you get a chemical reaction resulting in the formation of a salt
Potassium is a metal element. It is not a halogen. Example for halogen is Chlorine.
Gold is not a halogen it is a transition metal
F-F Cl-Cl or any other halogen-halogen ;halogen- alkaline metal Na-Cl
Chlorine is a Halogen. Along with the rest of the elements in the group. Mostly ending with ine. Bromine and Fluorine for example.
No. A metal will replace any less active metal.
A metal and halogen react to form an ionic bond in which the metal gives an eletron to the halogen Most basic example would be table salt NaCl NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H20
This electron is lost.
Potassium is a metal element. It is not a halogen. Example for halogen is Chlorine.
Gold is not a halogen it is a transition metal
Iodine (a halogen) is not a metal.
Potassium is a metal element. It is not a halogen. Example for halogen is Chlorine.
Barium is a metal.
Polonium is a metal.
Ionic. The metal will donate electron(s) to the halogen that will accept electrons. NaCl, for example.
Magnesium is an alkaline earth metal, not a halogen.
A salt
No, copper is a transition metal.