nitrogen has the highest electronegativity
Lithium has a lower electronegativity than krypton. The electronegativity for lithium is 0.98; the electronegativity for krypton is 3.0. Note that most noble gases in group 18 have no electronegativity at all since the do not make compounds. However, since krypton and xenon do make compounds under some circumstances, they do have a measurable electronegativity.
Alkali metals. Hydrogen, lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, caesium, and francium.
Argon and Xenon have the same number of valence electrons, both are noble gases (group 18 that have 8 electrons).
in number order it goes hydrogen, helium, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, neon, chlorine, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon. Hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, and chlorine are diatomic gases. Helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon are monatomic gases.
No. It is fairly inert, but it is not noble. The noble gases are helium, neon, argon, krypton, and xenon which are in group 18 of the periodic table of elements.
Lithium, Nickel, Xenon.
Lithium has a lower electronegativity than krypton. The electronegativity for lithium is 0.98; the electronegativity for krypton is 3.0. Note that most noble gases in group 18 have no electronegativity at all since the do not make compounds. However, since krypton and xenon do make compounds under some circumstances, they do have a measurable electronegativity.
Lithium (Li), Xenon (Xe), Oxygen (O), Potassium (K), Zinc (Zn), Strontium (Sr).
It is chemically inert. Its electronegativity, on the Pauling scale is 2.60
Yes, they are both gases.
In order from least reactive to most, the order is xenon, nickel, then lithium. I determined this based in the theory that non-metals are less reactive.
lithium is a violently reactive metalnickel is a fairly nonreactive metalxenon is an inert gas
All gases can mix with one another.
It should be ONXe but here it is O2N2Xe meaning there are 2 oxygen atoms, 2 nitrogen atoms and 1 Xenon atom. It must be a "special" compound
Several elemental gases are not in the same period as lithium. These are: hydrogen helium chlorine argon bromine krypton xenon radon
juipter
Groups 15, 18 and 1.