Rubidium-82 decays by K Capture initiating beta+ with a half-life of 1.273 minutes decaying to Krypton-82...
3782Rb + e- --> 3682Kr + e+ + ve
Yes. Rubidium is an alkali metal, and all alkali metals have one valence electron.
RbI + AgNO3 ---> RbNO3 + AgI It is displacement reaction. Rubidium is an alkali metal hence it is highly reactive and easily displaces silver from silver nitrate solution.
Rubidium has one valence electron as it an alkali metal.
If consumed rubidium may be poisonous, but other wise it isn't.
1. Rubidium don't gain atoms ! 2. If you think to electrons rubidium loss one electron and becom a cation.
Francium is radioactive and rubidium not. Also the electron configuration, atomic number, physical properties, hazards etc. are different.
The word equation for the reaction of rubidium with water is rubidium + water --> rubidium hydroxide + hydrogen. Rubidium is a metal that reacts very quickly and fiercely, even explosively with water.
The equation for the beta decay of 86Rb:3786Rb --> 3886Sr+ -10e where the -10e represents a beta particle or electron.
Being an alkali metal Rubidium reacts violently with water, the reaction is similar to sodium and water but rubidium like cesium causes violent and explosive reaction with water, besides rubidium is highly reactive it gets rapidly oxidized.
what is the balanced equation for Rubidium metal reacting with halogen iodine
Yes. Rubidium is an alkali metal, and all alkali metals have one valence electron.
rubidium
Well, you have this a little wrong. the eleectrons are involved in a chemical reaction, but are not themselves undergoing the reaction. they are the cause of a reaction and take part in it, but do not undergo a reaction. your question really is "What kind of bond does Rubidium make?" the answer to this is an ionic bond. Rubidium is an alkalai metal, and therefore ONLY creates ionic bonds. Rubidium forces its single valence electron onto another atom, at which time they each gain an electromagnetic charge. the positively charged rubidium ion is attracted to the negatively charged ion (almost definitely a non-metal, such as fluorine) causing them to be bonded.
RbI + AgNO3 ---> RbNO3 + AgI It is displacement reaction. Rubidium is an alkali metal hence it is highly reactive and easily displaces silver from silver nitrate solution.
No, rubidium is more reactive than potassium. The explanation for this is that rubidium has its single electron farther from the nucleus, where it is more easily removed. However, rubidium is also radioactive, so it is not often studied.
Rubidium has one valence electron as it an alkali metal.
Rubidium.