It is extremely reactive to pretty much everything, so in its purest form, yes. However, when you go to the dentist and have flouride applied to your teeth, it is a very small amount of a compound with fluorine in it, which reacts with and removes the plaque, tartar, and other buildups on your teeth. So it is dangerous pure, but not in small amounts or in compounds. And you will rarely, if ever, find it pure. Unless you happen to be a chemist.
Flourine
Flourine diiodide.
flouride
flourine
Fluorine is a chemical element that is composed of pure fluorine gas molecules, each consisting of two atoms of fluorine bonded together. It is a highly reactive nonmetal and a member of the halogen group on the periodic table.
Flourine is part of the Halogen groups
What's Flourine, I am gonna searcg that's right
If you mean something such as "pure flourine" it is referring to it's "elemental state" F2 in Flourine's case. If you mean something such as "pure flourine" it is referring to it's "elemental state" F2 in Flourine's case.
in a cave.
Flourine is a non-metal, more specifically a gas. Therefore, it does not exhibit the metal property of being malleable.
No. Fluorine is a nonmetal.
F2
Flourine
18.998
Henri Moissan
flourine
Flourine diiodide.