Fluorine is an element. It appears in the Periodic Table of elements with chemical symbol F. A compound is when two or more elements come together and get chemically bonded, such as NaF which is sodium fluoride.
Flourine is an element.
A compound is simply different elements bonded to each other, in this case tin (Sn) and two fluorine atoms (F).
any element that is a non metal will do
The single "most likely" element that would form an ionic compound with fluorine is cesium, or possibly francium if enough of it could be collected. This is because cesium, among stable elements, has the lowest electronegativity and fluorine has the highest electronegativity. However, any alkali or alkaline earth metal element in fact readily forms an ionic compound with fluorine, as do many other metals.
Lithium
If fluorine combines with an element such that their electronegativity difference is more than 1.7, then they will form an ionic compound. Example:- Hydrogen fluoride is an ionic compound. Hydrogen has electronegativity of 2.1 and fluorine has 4.0. So, the difference is 1.9. Therefore, it is an ionic compound.
Fluorine is molecular, but it is an element, not a compound.
gaseous element
A compound is simply different elements bonded to each other, in this case tin (Sn) and two fluorine atoms (F).
F2, fluorine, is an element.
F2 is fluorine, which is an element, not a compound.
It is a compound of tin and fluorine (if it has two parts to its name or ends in -ide, it is not an element).
No, fluoride and fluorine are not the same. Fluorine is a chemical element, represented by the symbol F on the periodic table. Fluoride, on the other hand, is an ion or compound that contains fluorine, often formed when fluorine reacts with another element.
Any metallic element will form an ionic compound with fluorine. ("Flourine" is not a chemical name!) Examples of metals are sodium, magnesium, lanthanum, and iron.
Fluorine
any element that is a non metal will do
Krypton
No, it is a compound made of two elements: fluorine and potassium.