Dat Ho
The chemical reactivity of alkali metals increase when the atomic number increase.
Noble metals have a low chemical reactivity.
Electronegativity - capacity to loss electrons - is representative for the reactivity of chemical elements; for metals low electronegativity is a high reactivity.
This depends on the chemical reactivity of the metal (position on the reativity series).
Noble metals have a low reactivity.
The chemical reactivity of alkali metals increase when the atomic number increase.
Potassium (K)
The relationship between ionization energy and reactivity of metals affects their chemical properties. Metals with low ionization energy are more reactive because they can easily lose electrons to form positive ions. This reactivity influences how metals interact with other substances and their ability to undergo chemical reactions.
Noble metals have a low chemical reactivity.
Electronegativity - capacity to loss electrons - is representative for the reactivity of chemical elements; for metals low electronegativity is a high reactivity.
The reactivity series of metals is a list that ranks metals in order of their reactivity with other substances. Metals that are higher in the reactivity series are more likely to react with acids or other compounds compared to those lower in the series. This series helps predict how metals will behave in chemical reactions.
Alkali metals are lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, caesium and francium.They are the metals with the higher chemical reactivity.
This depends on the chemical reactivity of the metal (position on the reativity series).
Noble metals have a low reactivity.
Reactivity of metals is an important characteristics that is used almost in all electrochemical cells.Some metals such as copper, aluminum, iron etc can undergo rapid red-ox reaction in a chemical cell. On the other hand, certain metals such as platinum and gold, also known as inert electrodes have very low reactivity.
The metals become more reactive as you move down and left.
"Carbon and hydrogen are often included in the reactivity series even though they are non-metals. Carbon is included because this helps to explain what happens in the extraction of iron in a blast furnace. Hydrogen is included because any metal below it will not react with dilute acids."http://www.frankswebspace.org.uk/ScienceAndMaths/chemistry/reactivitySeries.htm