The are the other alkali metals: lithium, potassium, rubidium, caesium.
Lithium and potassium has same properties as sodium.They are alkali metals.They are placed in group-1.The elements of the same group have same chemical properties. Li and K are the elements above and below Na in the period. So they have same properties as sodium.
No other element has the exact same properties as sodium, but the three with the most similar properties would most likely be lithium, potassium, and rubidium.
It's sodium chloride if you're talking about the compound NaCl. And no, the property of the compound will not be the same as the property of either of the elements.
No two elements have the same properties.
element in a group exibhit more or less same properties some of them have more things and some have less as they are dependent on the valency in the outermst shell of the elctrons so that they acn become reactive ,metal non metals etc
Lithium and potassium has same properties as sodium.They are alkali metals.They are placed in group-1.The elements of the same group have same chemical properties. Li and K are the elements above and below Na in the period. So they have same properties as sodium.
No other element has the exact same properties as sodium, but the three with the most similar properties would most likely be lithium, potassium, and rubidium.
It's sodium chloride if you're talking about the compound NaCl. And no, the property of the compound will not be the same as the property of either of the elements.
the properties of a compound are not the same as the elements that form them.
No. They can have radically different properties from the elements they're formed from.Easy example: Sodium chloride. Sodium is a highly reactive nonmetal. Chlorine is a highly reactive nonmetal. They combine into a very nonreactive compound - table salt.
No two elements have the same properties.
The properties from the original elements are all left behind; almost no compound shows any of the properties of its constituent elements (the most widely used example of this is sodium and chlorine forming sodium chloride).
element in a group exibhit more or less same properties some of them have more things and some have less as they are dependent on the valency in the outermst shell of the elctrons so that they acn become reactive ,metal non metals etc
True. Compounds do not have the same properties as the elements that form them.
Yes, the properties of compounds are different from those of their component elements. For example, sodium metal and chlorine gas react to form the solid salt sodium chloride.
No, Properties of compounds are totally diffident from that of their constituent elements. For example the property of common salt (sodium chloride) is no way related to either the properties of sodium metal and chlorine gas.
Because they are adjacent members of the same periodic table column.