Noble gasses are found in group number 8A or 18. There :)
Noble gases are nonreactive gaseous elements that are located in group 18 of the periodic table. They are characterized by having a full valence shell of electrons, making them stable and unreactive under normal conditions.
Elements with full outer shells, the noble gas elements, are located in the column at the extreme right of the periodic table.
Noble gases Eg:-Helium,Neon,Argon,Xenon,Radon
The elements that are almost completely unreactive are the noble gases in group 18.
Group 18, also called the noble gases, contains the elements that are nonreactive.
Noble gases are nonreactive gaseous elements that are located in group 18 of the periodic table. They are characterized by having a full valence shell of electrons, making them stable and unreactive under normal conditions.
Noble gases. Group 18. ;]
Elements with full outer shells, the noble gas elements, are located in the column at the extreme right of the periodic table.
The group 18 elements, also called the noble gases, are gaseous elements, completely nonreactive, with a full, stable valence shell. They were the last elements to be discovered because they're inert.
Noble gases Eg:-Helium,Neon,Argon,Xenon,Radon
There are "noble gases" of which neon is one. They're the elements at the far-right side of the Periodic Table. As their outer orbitals are completely populated, noble gases are nonreactive.
The elements that are almost completely unreactive are the noble gases in group 18.
There are "noble gases" of which neon is one. They're the elements at the far-right side of the periodic table. As their outer orbitals are completely populated, noble gases are nonreactive.
Because it is a noble gas, it is no reactive, as all its electron shells are filled.
Group 18, also called the noble gases, contains the elements that are nonreactive.
D. Noble Gases
Noble gases form a group of fairly nonreactive elements in the periodic table. These elements have a full valence shell of electrons, making them stable and unlikely to form chemical bonds with other elements. Examples include helium, neon, and argon.