Fluorine and Bromine are the two elements having the same property as that of Chlorine.
Fluorine and iodine will have very similar properties because they have the same amount of valence electrons.
all group 17 atoms are similar, so Bromine and Iodine would also be similar. Astitaine is much less well known but would also be somewhat similar as well.
Fluorine is more chemically similar to chlorine than it is to oxygen. Fluorine and chlorine both have 7 valance electrons, whereas oxygen has 6.
i guess
elements in each group of the periodic table have identical chemical properties as they have the same no. of valence electrons which determines their chemical properties. since calcium is in group II of the periodic table, it has the same chemical properties as the elements in group II. Elements in group II consists of: Be, Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba, Ra Elements in the same group has different physical properties such as boiling and melting points. However there are trends of their physical properties down the group.
Each element has similar properties to the other elements in its group on the periodic table. Sodium is an alkali metal, and those are the elements in Group 1 of the periodic table of elements. We know that lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium and francium all have similar chemical properties.
all group 17 atoms are similar, so Bromine and Iodine would also be similar. Astitaine is much less well known but would also be somewhat similar as well.
no
Buttholes
There are two elements. Those are sodium and chlorine.
Yes, this affirmation is true.
No: The compounds more often have very different properties from those of 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.
Since they are in the same group (2A), yes they have similar properties, more than those of elements in other groups.
those elements are in the same 'family' or 'group'
chronium, tungsten, and seaborgium
Column VII A is an obsolete name; the official name of IUPAC is Group 17 (halogens group).