Francium and Flourine are the most reactive elements. Francium is at the bottom, Flourine is at the top. The trend isn't as simple as your question. Elements towards the top of the table "want" electrons more. This means they are less likely to give them up and more likely to "steal." In terms of reactivity, this means that the metals at the top are less reactive and the non-metals at the top are more reactive.
the most reactive (non-metals) group in the periodic table is GROUP 17+they are all reactive
The most reactive nonmetals are the halogens in group 17 of the periodic table.
The most reactive metals will be found in Group 1 on the right side of the periodic table.
The most reactive nonmetals are located in top most right section of the Periodic Table, excluding group 18 (has no reactivity).
The Halogen Family is the most reactive group of nonmetals.
in the Periodic Table it is the most reactive metals!
No the most reactive metals are in the first group on the periodic table. They get more reactive as you go down a group
Alkali metals. This is the most reactive group on the periodic table
The most reactive nonmetals are the halogens in group 17 of the periodic table.
The most reactive nonmetals are the halogens in group 17 of the periodic table.
the most reactive (non-metals) group in the periodic table is GROUP 17+they are all reactive
The Alkali metals are the most reactive group of metals in the Periodic Table. Of these Francium is the most reactive metal of all.
The Alkali metals are the most reactive group of metals in the Periodic Table. Of these Francium is the most reactive metal of all.
The most reactive metals are in the group 1 of the Periodic Table - the alkali metals.
Halogens
group 17, halogens
group 1