Anything that is not a noble gas will combine with chlorine.
Elements that can combine with chlorine include sodium (to form table salt, NaCl) and hydrogen (to form hydrogen chloride gas, HCl). Other elements such as fluorine, oxygen, and sulfur can also combine with chlorine to form various compounds.
Yes, it can, and it combines with many other elements. The most common example is sodium chloride, ordinary table salt.
The elements of the compound TiCl4 are: 1. Titanium 2. Chlorine These elements combine to form a compound.
Reactivity is a term related to the aggressiveness (or not) of an element to combine with other elements. Oxygen, Chlorine, and Fluorine are among the most aggressive.
Yes, rubidium has many chemical compounds.
The mineral that contains elements that combine with chlorine, fluorine, bromine, or iodine is halite, also known as rock salt. Halite is composed of sodium chloride (NaCl), which is the chemical compound formed when sodium combines with chlorine.
When you chemically combine chlorine and sodium, you get sodium chloride, which is commonly known as table salt. Sodium donates an electron to chlorine, forming an ionic bond between the two elements.
Just about every element except for the noble gasses can combine with chlorine. Commonly it is combined with sodium (to form table salt) and hydrogen (to form hydrochloric acid)
Calcium chloride is formed by the combination of the elements calcium and chlorine. Calcium is a metal, while chlorine is a nonmetal. When these elements react, they form a compound known as calcium chloride (CaCl2).
Sodium and chlorine combine to form sodium chloride, which is commonly known as table salt.
Antimony primarily combines with sulfur to form antimony sulfide, which is the most common ore mineral of antimony. It can also combine with other elements such as oxygen, chlorine, and bromine to form various compounds.
Metals are particularly likely to combine chemically with the halogens you listed, but I will add that almost every element on the periodic table (with the exception of the noble gases) will combine with at least some of the halogens.