The halogen in period 5 is iodine (I). It is located in group 17 of the Periodic Table, which includes the halogens. Iodine is known for its use in medicine, as well as in various chemical applications. It is a solid at room temperature and typically appears as a dark purple or black crystalline substance.
Period 5 of the periodic table includes the halogen element bromine (Br). It is a highly reactive nonmetal and exists as a diatomic molecule in its natural state.
Chlorine is the element in the halogen family located in period 3 of the periodic table.
The short form electron configuration of halogens in period 6 is [Xe] 4f^14 5d^10 6s^2 6p^5. This indicates that a halogen in period 6 has a noble gas core of xenon followed by valence electrons in the 6s and 6p orbitals.
Yes, I (iodine) is a halogen.
Halogen is a gas, so your question doesn't make much sense. If you're asking about a halogen (light) bulb, then the answer is: mainly halogen.
Period 5 of the periodic table includes the halogen element bromine (Br). It is a highly reactive nonmetal and exists as a diatomic molecule in its natural state.
Iodine, element number 53 is the halogen (Group 17) element in period 5.
The halogen in period 2 is fluorine.
The halogen in the 2nd period is fluorine (F).
The halogen in period 6 is astatine. It is a radioactive element and is the rarest naturally occurring halogen on Earth.
Chlorine is the halogen that is in the same period as potassium. They are both in period 3 of the periodic table.
It is bromine. Edit: NO. It is NOT bromine. The third period halogen is chlorine (Cl). Bromine happens to be in period 4.
Fluorine is in the halogen family and in the second period of the periodic table.
Bromine is a liquid nonmetal halogen in the fourth period of the periodic table. It is the only halogen that exists in a liquid state at room temperature.
The element symbol for the halogen in the fifth period is Iodine, with the chemical symbol I.
Chlorine is the element in the halogen family located in period 3 of the periodic table.
A sixth period halogen is iodine, which is located in Group 17 of the periodic table. It has 53 protons and is known for its purple-black solid form. Iodine exhibits similarities with other halogens in terms of its chemical properties.