cesium
Compounds containing halogens are called halides. These compounds are formed when a halogen element (such as fluorine, chlorine, bromine, or iodine) reacts with another element to form a chemical bond.
The compound formed when sodium reacts with fluorine is sodium fluoride (NaF).
Fluorine is extremely reactive. It will react with many substances at room temperature and can spontaneously set fire to organic material. It will react exothermically with substances normally used to extinguish fires such as water and carbon dioxide. When it reacts it can form toxic compounds such as hydrogen fluoride.
Element x is likely to be a metal from Group 2 of the periodic table, such as calcium (Ca) or strontium (Sr), as they form compounds with a +2 oxidation state. When these metals react with fluorine, they form compounds with the formula MF2, where M represents the metal.
Fluorine is located in period 2 and group 17 in the periodic table. It is the known strongest non metal. It never gains a positive oxidation state. The corresponding acid, HF, is a weak acid. Fluorine reacts with almost all other elements and destroy many of the organic compounds forming carbon tetrafluoride and hydrogen fluoride.
Xenon can react with fluorine, oxygen, and nitrogen to form xenon compounds. These compounds are generally unstable and have varying degrees of reactivity.
Fluorine
F2 is a neutral diatomic molecule, it often reacts to form compounds that have a fluoride F-, ion.
The element that forms compounds with all other elements except helium, neon, and argon is fluorine. Fluorine is the most electronegative element and readily reacts with almost all other elements to form compounds.
Lithium reacts with fluorine to form an ionic compound, LiF. The rest all form covalent compounds
Calcium reacts with fluorine to form calcium fluoride (the symbol is CaF2).
Compounds containing halogens are called halides. These compounds are formed when a halogen element (such as fluorine, chlorine, bromine, or iodine) reacts with another element to form a chemical bond.
When radon reacts with fluorine, it forms radon fluoride (RnF2 or RnF4). These compounds are unstable and can decompose into their elements with release of energy. Radon fluoride compounds are primarily of interest in theoretical chemistry and have limited practical applications.
fluorine
Fluorine even combines with argon, krypton, xenon, and radon. Even in dark, cool conditions, fluorine reacts explosively with hydrogen. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorine Fluorine even combines with argon, krypton, xenon, and radon. Even in dark, cool conditions, fluorine reacts explosively with hydrogen. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorine
Fluorine is not typically thought of as dissolving in the same way that solids dissolve in liquids. However, fluorine can react with certain substances to form compounds or mix with other elements to create fluorine-containing solutions.
Yes, rubidium has many chemical compounds.