Lithium on the Periodic Table is found in the first group or family and the second period. The first family is often called the alkali metal family.
No, the Transition Metals are found in Groups III B to II B in the periodic table.
Elements with the same number of valence electrons are found in the same group or column of the periodic table. For example, all elements in Group 1 (such as lithium, sodium, potassium) have 1 valence electron.
They are named as Group(I) in the Periodic Table. However, they are also known as the Alkali Metals. They are Lithium, Sodium, Potassium, Rubidium, Caesium, and Francium. Francium is never found in the open lab, as it is radio-active.
Alkali elements can be found in the first column of the periodic table, including elements like sodium, potassium, and lithium. They are commonly found in salts and minerals, as well as in various everyday products such as table salt and baking soda.
Argon belongs to the noble gas family on the periodic table.
In group 1, the far left column of the Periodic Table, which is Lithium (Li), Sodium (Na), Potassium (K), Rudibium (Rb).
Silver (Ag) is a transition metal, found group (column) 1B on the periodic table.
Lithium, found in periodic table column 1. Beryllium usually loses two electrons, while boron and chlorine gain or share electrons in their reactions.
Lithiums in the group Alkali metals
Noble gases are found in column (or group) 18
column of the periodic table.
You are probably talking about hydrogen.However hydrogen is a very special case: it belongs in both the leftmost column (above lithium) and the rightmost column (above fluorine) before the inert gases of the periodic table. Also under very very high pressure hydrogen becomes metallic, which clearly makes it an alkali metal.
No, the Transition Metals are found in Groups III B to II B in the periodic table.
The Alkali metals or group I metals are found at the left.
The 1st column from the left
The far left column
alkaline earth metals