Although Xenon itself does not form any ions normally, being a Member of the Noble Gases (Group 8), it can be compounded with other nonmetals in a covalent bond to form polyatomic ions. The most common form of these usually consists of Xenon and a Halogen (more often Fluorine) or Oxygen, however others exists. An example is Tetraxenonogold II (AuXe4+2).
No. Xenon does not form ions.
the Xenon itself is an electron, so it doesn't have an ion charge
Xenon is a bob,e gas, which means that it can't form any cation or anion by itself. If it joins any other element, then it can form an ion.
No, it is a neutral element.
The neutral state.
Xenon does not readily form an ion.
No. Xenon does not form ions.
It is a nob,e gas so very rarely forms an ion but when it does it is an even cation.
the Xenon itself is an electron, so it doesn't have an ion charge
Xenon is a bob,e gas, which means that it can't form any cation or anion by itself. If it joins any other element, then it can form an ion.
No, it is a neutral element.
I- ion (iodine ion and not iodine) and xenon will have the same number of electrons (54 electrons)
The neutral state.
xenon
It will be weakly polar as a neutral compound, due to the presence of 1 unshared pair of electrons around the central xenon atom. (Additionally, the relatively large number of electrons in this compound will yield temporary dipoles in the form of dispersion forces.) If it's an ion, then I would need to know its charge. If its charge is +2 (meaning it has lost 2 electrons,) then that ion would be non-polar.
false
Xenon is found as a gas