Salt formers / group 17 elements.
The elements of Group VII (or group 17) of the Periodic Table are called halogens, which means "salt formers"
group 17
Noble Gases
Halogen
A halide is a compound consisting of two parts; a halogen and another electronegative element. The mostcommonhalogens arefluorine(F),chlorine(Cl),bromine(Br),iodine(I), andastatine(At). If put together with another element, they formfluoride,chloride,bromide,iodide, orastatide. Therefore, your question is not right since a halide consist of elements and one element can only be a halogen or non-halogen. (halogen and halide are two different things)
Iodine belongs to group 17. It is in the family called the halogens.
If the halogen is in ionic form in the compound, the general name is "halide". Common salt, with formula NaCl, is a familiar example. There are also many other compounds of halogens in which the halogen participates in a covalent bond rather than forming an ion.
No, calcium is not in the halogen group. The halogen group is made up of fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine.
Astatine is similar to the halogen family
Halogen
Chlorine is a halogen.
It's a halogen
halogen
Fluorine
it is called a halide.
Halogen
Chlorine, iodine and another make up the halogen triad.The halogens are:FluorineChlorineBromineIodineAstatineDoesn't sound like a triad to me.
Halogen
Bromine is the name of the element that is a liquid halogen. Bromine has the chemical symbol Br, and it has the atomic number of 35.
Fl is the chemical abbreviation of the Halogen Fluorine.