Noble gases have completely filled valence orbitals and hence they are stable and chemically inert under room temperature.
These are the noble gases: He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn.
Hydrogen
Noble Gases are stable due to the "octet" rule (they have as many electrons as they can hold) and will not bond.
Noble gases have completely filled electronic configuration and hence they are chemically inactive / inert / do not form bond with other elements.
Noble gases typically do not form bonds with metals because they are already stable and do not easily react with other elements.
The noble gases, such as helium and neon, do not typically bond with other elements due to their stable electron configuration. They have a full outer electron shell, making them chemically unreactive.
Noble gases (such as helium, neon, argon) are the least likely to form a polar covalent bond with carbon. This is because noble gases have full valence electron shells, making them highly stable and unlikely to interact with other atoms to form bonds.
Copper does not bond with noble gases, such as helium, neon, and argon, due to their stable electronic configurations. Additionally, copper does not readily bond with non-metals, such as carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, unless under specific conditions or in certain compounds.
These are the noble gases; but they aren't completely unreactive !
the nobel gases are already stable, with full octets of valence electrons
No. Noble gases exist in nature, and are chemical elements. These are the six noble gases: Helium (He) Neon (Ne) Argon (Ar) Krypton (Kr) Xenon (Xe) and the radioactive Radon (Rn)
They have a flu outermost energy level.