I suppose that technetium cannot be bonded with lithium.
Ionic bonding---with such different electronegativities it would be hard for lithium and fluorine to share electrons in a covalent bond. It is far more energetically favorable for the lithium atom to transfer an electron to fluorine to form Li+ and F- and then have those two hook up to form an ionic bond.
Li3N would be lithium nitride. LiNO3 would be lithium nitrate. LiN3 does not exist.
When lithium and sulfur combine, they do so as Li2S (lithium sulfide). This is an ionic compound.
Positively (apex)
Lithium and fluorine combine to form lithium fluoride. Another element that could combine with fluorine in a similar manner to lithium is sodium, which would form sodium fluoride. Both lithium and sodium belong to the alkali metal group and share similar chemical properties.
If you took 22000 mg of lithium you would most likely die. The drug will put you into a coma and it would be hard to get out of it.
Rhenium is similar to technetium.
Technetium is a man made chemical element.
Ionic bonding---with such different electronegativities it would be hard for lithium and fluorine to share electrons in a covalent bond. It is far more energetically favorable for the lithium atom to transfer an electron to fluorine to form Li+ and F- and then have those two hook up to form an ionic bond.
If we didn't have technetium, certain medical imaging procedures like bone scans and heart stress tests would be more challenging as technetium-99m is commonly used in nuclear medicine for diagnostic imaging. Alternative isotopes or imaging techniques would need to be developed, which could be more expensive or less effective. Additionally, research in nuclear physics and related fields may be impacted due to the unique properties of technetium for studying nuclear structure and reactions.
Lithium and bromine would form lithium bromide, a white crystalline compound. The combination of lithium, a metal, with bromine, a non-metal, results in an ionic bond where lithium loses an electron to bromine, forming a stable compound. Lithium bromide is commonly used in air conditioning systems and as a desiccant.
Li3N would be lithium nitride. LiNO3 would be lithium nitrate. LiN3 does not exist.
Technetium is an artificial chemical element and is extracted from fission products, prepared by neutron activation or by irradiation in particles accelerators.
Technetium is one of the rarest elements on the planet. Therefore no one knows if someone is allergic to it and what could cause it.
Tantalum
Li3P is an unstable compound. It would be named lithium phosphide, or if using the prefix notation, it would be called trilithium phosphide.
A lithium atom with 2 electrons would still be considered a lithium atom because the number of protons in the nucleus determines the element. However, it would be considered a lithium ion with a 2+ charge due to the loss of 1 electron.