Iodine is not a metal.
No single element can be both an alkali metal (form +1 cations) and a halogen (form -1 anions).Alkali metals :LithiumSodiumPotassiumRubidiumCesiumFranciumHalogens:FluorineChlorineBromineIodineAstatine
No, Fe is not an alkali metal. It is the chemical symbol for iron, which is a transition metal. Alkali metals are found in Group 1 of the periodic table, such as lithium, sodium, and potassium.
Lithium is a metal. In fact, it is an alkali metal (the metals found in group I are alkali metals).
When an alkali metal reacts with water, it produces an alkali metal hydroxide and hydrogen gas. This is a highly exothermic reaction, with the alkali metal displacing hydrogen from the water molecule.
No it's not an alkali metal the alkali metal group is in group one and two
No, sodium is an alkali metal. The halogens are fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine.
it is an alkali metal
LiI has two elements in it, lithium and iodine. Lithium is an alkali metal and iodine is a halogen, so together they form an ionic salt. The correct name is the lithium iodide.
No single element can be both an alkali metal (form +1 cations) and a halogen (form -1 anions).Alkali metals :LithiumSodiumPotassiumRubidiumCesiumFranciumHalogens:FluorineChlorineBromineIodineAstatine
Iodine (a halogen) is not a metal.
A metal is a base and is an alkali
Yes. Rubidium is an alkali metal in the sodium group. It will react with iodine to form rubidium iodide:- 2Rb+ I2 -> 2RbI
Sodium is an alkali metal.
alkali you idiots
The alkali metal, sodium, is an element.
It is a alkali metal for sure.
Alkali Metal