Yes, as it is nearer the left side of the Periodic Table.
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no they can bond with any other element
The noble gases, in column 18 (or in older tables, column VIII) do not bond, they already have full set of electrons. the rest all bond because they want full set of electrons to be more stable.
I don't think any element can easily , or even bond with Xenon. Xenon is a noble gas with enough electrons on the outermost shell, therefore it exist alone like other noble gas such as helium, argon in the same group: Group 0.
Uranium can form chemical compounds with the majority of other elements.
Titanium is an element (Ti), not a chemical bond. It can from chemical bonds with other elements that can react with it
Yes
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Titanium can form a chemical bond with bone, becoming integrated completely. Bone rejects most other elements.
Yes, hydrogen has one electron and will readily bond with other elements. Argon is an inert gas which does not bond with other elements easily.
By having a close look on the electronic configuration we can easily tell that which element will combine with the other elements and by which force too.
Carbon bonds easily with other elements because it has four valence electrons, allowing it to form strong covalent bonds with a variety of other elements to achieve a stable electron configuration.
any of them but they could explode easily
Scandium primarily forms compounds with elements such as oxygen, fluorine, and nitrogen. It can also bond with other metals such as aluminum, magnesium, and titanium to form alloys. In biology, scandium can be found complexing with ligands such as citrate and amino acids.
The outer electron shells of their atoms are full, and they do not need more electrons from other atoms, so they do not easily bond.
Carbon can bond with itself, and many other elements.
no they can bond with any other element