Elements in group 1 have 1 electron in their outer shell. Group 7 electrons have 7 electrons in their outer shell. This means that the group 1 element needs to give its electron to the group 7 element so that they both have full outer shells, making them stable. By a school boy in yr. 10
Did you mean group 7 or 17? Well if a group 1 and 7 element reacts it is called a Metal-Metal bond , which can be broken down into three subgroups: covalent, dative, and symmetry. If you ment Group 1 and 17 then it is an Ionic bond.
Group 17 elements, also known as the halogens, have seven electrons in their outer energy level. This makes them highly reactive, as they only need one more electron to achieve a stable octet configuration.
Because group 1 has 1 electron in it's outer most shell and the have to fill the energy level, so they gave there electron and form positive ion (cation). And group 17 has 7 electrons in it's outer most shell and they need to complete their shell so the gain electron and form negative ion (anion).
The opposite of Chlorine on the periodic table of elements is Sodium. Chlorine is a halogen located in group 17, while Sodium is an alkali metal located in group 1. They are opposite in terms of their properties and reactivity, with Chlorine being a nonmetal and Sodium being a metal.
It usually reacts the same?Alkali metals all react with water to give a alkali metal hydroxide and hydrogen.I thought you wrote "How do elements in the same group (in the periodic table) usually react?"EDIT: Hmm.... family. Opps I read wrong again.All alkanes contain Carbon-Carbon single bonds.All alkanes combust to give either carbon dioxide and water or carbon monoxide and waterAll alkenes contains Carbon=Carbon double bondAll alkenes decolourises aqueous bromineAll alcohol oxidises to give a carboxylic acid.Lol, that's too many examples....So, yea.... they usually reacts the same too.........
Francium would react most violently with hydrochloric acid but all of them would react violently. Cesium and Rubidium would certainly react explosively. Potassium would be very violent and catch fire. Sodium would be quite violent.
The alkali metals (Group 1) and the halogens (Group 17) are known to be very reactive elements. Alkali metals react vigorously with water, while halogens are highly reactive nonmetals that readily form compounds with other elements.
Two of them. A group 2 element has two valency electrons whereas those in group 17 have 7. The latter need one electron to make an ionic bond so two of them can react with a single group 2 element.
The alkali metals in group 1 react by losing one electron.
Group 1 and group 2 elements are reactive metals and react readily with water. They also react readily at high temperatures with oxygen. Over the millenia any free deposits would react to form compounds.
The combining ratio of Group 1 elements (alkali metals) with Group 17 elements (halogens) is typically 1:1. This means that one atom of a Group 1 element will combine with one atom of a Group 17 element to form a stable compound, such as sodium chloride (NaCl) or potassium bromide (KBr).
Group 17 or halogens will combine readily with group 1 elements.
No, oxygen is not given off when group 1 elements react with water. Instead, these reactions typically result in the formation of hydroxide ions and hydrogen gas.
Did you mean group 7 or 17? Well if a group 1 and 7 element reacts it is called a Metal-Metal bond , which can be broken down into three subgroups: covalent, dative, and symmetry. If you ment Group 1 and 17 then it is an Ionic bond.
Group 1 elements are known as alkali metals because they react with water to form alkali (or bases).
Pure elements in Group 1 (alkali metals) and Group 17 (halogens) are highly reactive due to their electron configurations. They readily form compounds with other elements to achieve a stable electron configuration. As a result, pure elements from these groups are not typically found in nature.
Group 16 on the Periodic Table, also known as the chalcogens, contains elements that react with oxygen to form compounds with the general formula X2O. The elements in this group include oxygen, sulfur, selenium, tellurium, and polonium.