Non-metals can bond together covalently, and there are millions of possibilities. A common one is hydrogen and oxygen bonding together to form water, or carbon and oxygen bonding together to form carbon dioxide.
non metal with non metal
because there is hydrogen compounds
Yes, it can combine with fluorine and oxygen, but bot very easily.
It combines with Oxygen the most.
Yes silver is quite reactive.
Nickel is one of the less chemically active metals. It does not easily combine with other elements.
Their outermost electron shells are full.
Sodium and lithium.
Atoms of elements in group 18 (noble gases) do not easily combine with other elements to form compounds.
No, methane does not tend to ionize and it is not an ionic compound, it is a covalent type of molecule.
It is for the detection of some specific elements in organic compound, in organic compounds elements are bonded through covalent bonds and are not free to move, when organic compounds are fused with sodium metal the elements form ionic compounds with sodium and become free ions in aqueous solution therefore easily may be detected with the help of suitable reagents.
Naphthalene is an organic compound with a chemical formula of C10H8. As you can see, it is solely made up of 2 non-metals. When 2 non-metals bond, it is likely to be covalent bonding because they do not form ions easily. The above compound exists as a white crystalline solid that is commonly used in mothballs. It goes through sublimation.
By having a close look on the electronic configuration we can easily tell that which element will combine with the other elements and by which force too.