Unanswerable question since it is unknown what KIND of PROPERTY is meant to be the most present in diatomic elements or which element has most of one (yet unknown) property.
Please rephrase your question.
For most elements, the diatomic molecule has the most atoms in it. For example, oxygen exists as O2, nitrogen as N2, hydrogen as H2, etc. These diatomic molecules contain two atoms of the element bonded together.
That is called a diatomic element. Hydrogen and Oxygen are two examples of diatomic elements.
That is called a diatomic element. Hydrogen and Oxygen are two examples of diatomic elements.
Mercury or HG is an element that is liquid at room temperature and is not a diatomic element.
diatomic
no. it is monoatomic
Bromine is the only element that is liquid and forms diatomic molecules Br2. Mercury is also an element and is liquid but is monoatomic.
Nitrogen (N2) is the group 15 element that exists as diatomic molecules.
Sodium is not diatomic. Sodium is a metallic element that typically exists as individual atoms in its elemental form. Diatomic molecules, on the other hand, are molecules made up of two atoms of the same element bonded together. An example of a diatomic molecule is diatomic oxygen (O2).
Well, honey, Mercury might be a planet, but it ain't no diatomic element. Diatomic elements are those that naturally exist as molecules composed of two atoms bonded together, like hydrogen or oxygen. So, Mercury can keep spinning around the sun, but it ain't gonna be part of the diatomic club anytime soon.
Iodine or Fluorine . . . A+
Iodine or Fluorine . . . A+