Absolutely; barium is a highly reactive metal.
Yes! Barium is a group 2 metal and so loses two electrons. Oxygen is a group 16 non metal and will readily pick up two electrons. So, they form BaO.
Barium oxide is formed from barium and oxygen.
Barium has a charge of -2 and Oxygen has a charge of +2. Oxygen is nature appears as O2, therefore Barium + Oxygen = barium oxide; Ba + O2 = BaO; 2Ba + O2 = 2BaO
Barium can form two distinct compounds with oxygen as the only other element in the compound: barium oxide with formula BaO and barium peroxide with formula BaO2. The first of these compounds is more common and more stable.
Yes.
One
No. A substance will not react with itself.
Barium don't react with copper.
When barium reacts with oxygen barium oxide is produced. Ba + O2 -> BaO
Yes! Barium is a group 2 metal and so loses two electrons. Oxygen is a group 16 non metal and will readily pick up two electrons. So, they form BaO.
Radium react with halogens (F, Cl, Br, I), oxygen, nitrogen, water, etc.
Barium, hydrogen and oxygen.
Barium, hydrogen and oxygen.
Barium hydroxide.
Barium, oxygen and hydrogen.
These compounds doesn't react.
barium hydroxide