many materials, both elements and compounds can react with each other to form a compound.
Aside from 'The Covalent Bond' type, Magnesium will act chemically like Calcium will.
Uranium form chemical compounds with the majority of other chemical elements.
Helium has completely filled orbitals, is stable, has small size and is chemically inert. It doesn't form bond with any other element.
I think it's impossible
you have a chemical bond that is either ionic or covalent or something between the two extremes. Atoms become more stable when they are combined. Valence electron form hybridized orbitals with empty orbitals to form a bond in covalent bonds.
In general, when a chemical bond forms between two or more atoms, it creates a molecule.
It makes a molecule.
form covalent bond
Argon is chemically inert. It does not form bonds with other elements.
Aside from 'The Covalent Bond' type, Magnesium will act chemically like Calcium will.
Uranium form chemical compounds with the majority of other chemical elements.
form covalent bond
They are bonded together via chemical bond and form compounds.
The metal and nonmetal will tend to form an ionic bond between them when they combine chemically.
They chemically bond together t form molecules of H2O.
No. Argon is chemically inert and does not form any bond with magnesium (or other metals).
When elements chemically bond together a new chemical is produced