Translated to greek, "Halogens" mean "salt former". Its called that because many of the halogen compounds are salts. (fluorite (CaF2) and cryolite (Na3AlF6) or a more common one - NaCl - sodium chloride.
Hope this helps.
The nonmetals in Group 7A are called halogens. They include elements such as fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine. Halogens are highly reactive elements that tend to form salts when they react with metals.
Sodium and Chlorine = Sodium Chloride Potassium and Iodine = Potassium Iodide
No, Group 7A elements are the halogens - a highly reactive group of nonmetals. Alkaline earth metals are found in Group 2A of the periodic table and are characterized by being shiny, silvery-white metals that react readily with water.
Group 7A cations refer to the cations of Group 7A elements in the periodic table, also known as the halogens. Some common examples of Group 7A cations include fluoride (F-), chloride (Cl-), bromide (Br-), and iodide (I-).
The highly reactive elements in group 7A, also known as group 17 or the halogens, are fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine. These elements are known for forming salts by gaining an electron to achieve a full outer electron shell.
If you meant to say "elements ARE most likely to bond with," which is probably what you meant, then the answer would be 7A(or 17), also called the Halogens. "Halogen" actually means "salt-forming." When you take a chlorine (7A) and sodium (1A), you end up with table salt! ---- In a nutshell, the answer is Group 7A, or 17.
Group 17 elements are called halogens. They include Fluorine-F, Chlorine-Cl, Bromine-Br, Iodine-I, and Astatine-At. They are all nonmetals and are reactive because they have 7 electrons in their outer shell, just one electron short of having a full shell.
Yes, group 6A in the periodic table is not the halogens family, but rather the group consists of chalcogens such as oxygen and sulfur. The halogens family is group 7A, which includes elements like fluorine and chlorine.
In Group 3A (boron family), the electron dot diagrams would contain more dots as these elements typically have 3 valence electrons. In Group 7A (halogens), the electron dot diagrams would only have 1 dot as halogens have 7 valence electrons.
If by seven you mean 7A than the answer is both. 17 is the newer system which the scientific community was hoping to establish, which would get rid of the A and B classification. 7A is the older system in which all representative elements are given an A and transition metals are B.
The Group 7A elements, also known as the halogens, typically form ions with a charge of -1. This is because they only need to gain one electron to achieve a stable electron configuration similar to the nearest noble gas.
Fluorine and the rest of the group are known as "Halogens" (salt-formers, literally)