The question is very confusingly worded (and, in English, ungrammatical). How about I ignore it and just answer the question I feel like answering, which is "What will krypton react with?"
Krypton will react with fluorine and oxygen under certain conditions.
KrAr+ and KrH+ polyatomic ions have been investigated, and there's some evidence for a KrXe or KrXe+ species.
Krypton apparently can also bond with nitrogen or carbon if you start with a krypton-fluorine compound and react it with a cyanide compound at low temperatures.
That's pretty much it, so far as is currently known.
Krypton is a noble gas and already has noble gas configuration.
Krypton is already a noble gas and hence need not gain noble gas configuration.
Plutonium react with the majority of nonmetals; plutonium doesn't react with noble gases. Plutonium can form alloys with other metals.
All of the Noble Gasses * Helium * Neon * Argon * Krypton * Xenon * Radon
because fluorine is highly electronegative element and reacts with the electron cloud of krypton and xenon
Krypton don't react with acids.
Neither. Both argon and krypton does not react with nitrogen.
It's a noble gas; it doesn't react with much of anything.
yes it reacts and combines with a halogen called fluorine and can also make calthrates
Krypton is a noble gas and already has noble gas configuration.
No. Krypton is one of the noble/inert gases, so it does not react with any other element (the exception to that rule is Xenon, which can form a compound with Fluorine, but this is irrelevant).
Krypton is already a noble gas and hence need not gain noble gas configuration.
No, neither, niente, noppa, zero
Gold, Platinum, Argon, Helium, Krypton, Xenon, etc.
Gold, Platinum, Argon, Helium, Krypton, Xenon, etc.
no because density increases down a group
Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon and Radon