No, hydrogen is not a halogen. the 17th column on the periodic table is called halogen column. both halogens and hydrogen are diatomic elements, but the difference is that halogens have ionic charge of minus 1. But, hydrogen can have either ion charge of plus 1 or minus 1. hope that helps
Yes, bleach is a halogen compound.
Bromine is the only liquid halogen at room temperature.
The halogen in period 6 is astatine. It is a radioactive element and is the rarest naturally occurring halogen on Earth.
iodine is the only halogen in solid form. so it is the halogen which gives violet vapours on sublimation...
Fluorine is the halogen present in Teflon.
This element is iodine because it is a halogen.
Organic compounds may contain other elements than carbon, hydrogen and oxygen such as nitrogen ,halogen, sulphur, etc....these elements are known as foreign element.
iodine
The different types of halogen bulbs available in the market include standard halogen bulbs, halogen floodlights, halogen spotlights, and halogen capsule bulbs.
Any element, other than a halogen is - by definition - not a halogen and so it does not have a halogen and that is less than one halogen.
Yes, I (iodine) is a halogen.
No, Bromine is a Halogen
Halogen.
This halogen is astatine.
Halogen is a gas, so your question doesn't make much sense. If you're asking about a halogen (light) bulb, then the answer is: mainly halogen.
Halogen gas is in a Tungsten-Halogen Light Bulb.
Yes, bleach is a halogen compound.