With great difficulty!. The answer, in general, is not known but it is thought to be less than a millionth of 1 percent.
No. Xenon is highly unreactive. Xenon will, under special circumstances, react with elemental fluorine, which is much more reactive than fluorides.
The cost of xenon can vary depending on the supplier and market conditions. On average, xenon can cost around $5-$10 per gram.
Xenon does not readily form stable compounds, but it can react with fluorine to form xenon fluorides such as XeF₂ and XeF₄. Xenon can also form compounds with oxygen, such as xenon trioxide (XeO₃) and xenon tetroxide (XeO₄), when exposed to extreme conditions. Xenon can form complexes with other elements, such as in [Au(CN)₂]XeF₆ which consists of xenon coordinated to gold and cyanide ligands.
There are 19.2 moles of fluorine in 3.2 moles of xenon hexafluoride. Xenon hexafluoride has 6 fluorine atoms in each molecule, so you multiply the moles of xenon hexafluoride by 6 to find the moles of fluorine.
To find the total mass of 35 Xenon atoms, you would first calculate the molar mass of Xenon, which is 131.293 g/mol. Then, divide the total mass by Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23) to find the mass of one Xenon atom. Finally, multiply this mass by 35 to get the total mass of 35 Xenon atoms.
The atomic number of xenon is 54. So there are 54 protons in xenon.
xenon would be about 120$ for 100 grams
At&t.
In the earth's atmosphere.
In 1898.
Approx 0.00001%.
xenon is usually a waste product of nuclear reactors and although has power not that much
No. Xenon is highly unreactive. Xenon will, under special circumstances, react with elemental fluorine, which is much more reactive than fluorides.
I have the xenon and i have thissame question, but i have looked every where on the phone and could not find it. So i don't think you can.
$120 for 100 grams
The cost of xenon can vary depending on the supplier and market conditions. On average, xenon can cost around $5-$10 per gram.
No. It is very rare but not hard to produce.