I dont know haha
A group 7 compound refers to a chemical compound that contains an element from group 7 of the periodic table, which is also known as the halogens group. This group includes elements such as fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine. Group 7 compounds are known for their reactivity and tendency to form salts.
there is no element found in such a place because that spot doesn't exist. there is a period 4-7 but not 1-3 for group 6. that particular spot is open and doesn't include any elements
Hydrogen is not in group 7. It is in group 1 of the periodic table.
Iodine typically carries a valency of -1, +1, +3, +5, or +7, depending on the compound it is a part of.
7th period because atomic size down the group increases. And Alkali Earth metals are found only in Group 1. The element is in Group 1 and period 7
Group 1 elements (such as Sodium and Potassium) readily form compounds because they are highly reactive metals that readily lose their outer electron to form positive ions. Group 7 elements (such as Chlorine and Fluorine) are highly reactive nonmetals that readily gain an electron to form negative ions, making them prone to forming compounds as well.
Group 1: Alkali metals Group 7: Manganese family Note: As per old naming terminology, group VIIA will be halogens. Now this is group 17.
Astatine is in the group 7A of the periodic table. The members of this group all have an ionic charge of -1, so At (astatine) will have a -1 ionic charge.
group 1 are the alkali metals group 2 are the alkaline earth metals group 7 are the halogens group 8 are the noble gases
No, hydrogen does not belong to group 7 of the periodic table. It is placed in group 1 since it has 1 electron in its outer shell.
The bonding will likely involve ionic bonding between a Group 5 element from Period 3 and a Group 7 element from Period 2. Group 5 elements typically form 3- ions, while Group 7 elements typically form 1- ions. The attraction between these ions would result in the formation of an ionic compound.
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