Want this question answered?
Barium is more reactive than magnesium.
Sr
sodium because it's the first group and first group are the most
Zinc is more reactive than mercury.
No, strontium is more reactive than calcium.
if you mean pure barium as in barium metal then yes it is very reactive if you left a piece of it out in the open air over night it would turn to a pile of white barium oxide and other various compounds
Yes, because it is lower down in the group.
Fluorine would be the more reactive element because it needs to gain one electron. While Barium needs to gain two electrons. Thus it is easier to gain one than to lose two.
Many are thereSuch as Sodium, Potassium, Barium, Calcium, Magnesiumetc.
Down a group the reactivity increases. So, barium (Ba) is more reactive than strontium (Sr).
Barium is more reactive than magnesium.
Sr
Calcium and barium have similar reactivities, because they are both alkaline earth metals. Quantitatively, barium is slightly more reactive than calcium because it has more electron shells between its valence electrons and its nucleus.
The metals listed are all alkali metals or alkali-earth metals. The periodic trend for these groups is: as you move down the group/family, reactivity increases. The alkali metals will be more reactive than the respective alkali-earth metals.Sodium and lithium are alkali metals, so you can organize them first. Sodium is further down in the family than lithium, so we can say that sodium is the most reactive out of the group, followed by lithium. Then we have barium and radium left. Radium is slightly more reactive than barium due to its position, so it is third and barium is fourth.
Calcium is more reactive but not as Potassium or Sodium because according to the displacement series Calcium comes as third and the last under the reactive elements of the displacement series.
sodium is more reactive than magnesium!
Definitely lithium. Lithium is a Group I alkali metal, while Beryllium is a Group II alkaline earth metal and are on the same period. Group I Alkali metals are generally more reactive as they only need to lose one electron to have a complete outer shell.