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The most reactive nonmetal is fluorine. Fluorine is a halogen, which is Group 17 on the Periodic Table, and the halogens are the most reactive...
Yes. Using the modern numbering system, that group is named group 17. Group 17 contains the halogens, the most reactive nonmetals.
The noble gases group: He, Ar, Ne, Kr, Xe, Rn.
caesium is the most reactive non-radioactive metal and Florine is the most reactive non-metal, but francium is the most reactive, radioactive metal
Group 1 or alkali metals.
group 17, halogens
The most reactive nonmetal is fluorine. Fluorine is a halogen, which is Group 17 on the Periodic Table, and the halogens are the most reactive...
The most reactive nonmetals are the halogens in group 17 of the periodic table.
Yes. Using the modern numbering system, that group is named group 17. Group 17 contains the halogens, the most reactive nonmetals.
The halogen group is the MOST reactive nonmetal group.
The more reactive elements on the periodic table are farther down in the rows. For example, Te, or Tellurium, is in group 16 and row 5. The elements in row 7 are the most reactive, but technically Tellurium, since it is the farthest down nonmetal on the periodic table, would be the most reactive nonmetal, technically making group 16 the most reactive row of the nonmetals.
The Halogen Family is the most reactive group of nonmetals.
The noble gases group: He, Ar, Ne, Kr, Xe, Rn.
caesium is the most reactive non-radioactive metal and Florine is the most reactive non-metal, but francium is the most reactive, radioactive metal
The first group of the periodic table contains the reactive alkali metals: lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium, and francium.
Halogens among halogens fluorine is most reactive
Group 1 or alkali metals.