You will get water and argon. Hydrogen an oxygen will readily and violently combine to form water. Argon is an inert gas, and so will not combine with other elements.
No. Both are noble gases and do not combine with each other
Fluorine
Fluorine even combines with argon, krypton, xenon, and radon. Even in dark, cool conditions, fluorine reacts explosively with hydrogen. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorine Fluorine even combines with argon, krypton, xenon, and radon. Even in dark, cool conditions, fluorine reacts explosively with hydrogen. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorine
in number order it goes hydrogen, helium, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, neon, chlorine, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon. Hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, and chlorine are diatomic gases. Helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon are monatomic gases.
Yes, it is a good choice because fluorine is the most reactive halogen; but now is known only HArF.
Yes, hydrogen and fluorine.
Argon is a noble gas; it hardly combines with any other element.Argon is a noble gas; it hardly combines with any other element.Argon is a noble gas; it hardly combines with any other element.Argon is a noble gas; it hardly combines with any other element.
No. argon is a monoatomic element. It does not combine with other elements or with itself.
Hydrogen and hydrogen+fluorine.
Those chemicals do not combine to make any one compound.
The chemical symbol for fluorine is F and for argon is Ar. So their chemical formulas are F2 and Ar, respectively.
Argon is a noble gas, which means it is non-reactive and typically does not form compounds with other elements. Its outer electron shell is full, making it stable and unreactive.
No, fluorine and argon would not form an ionic bond. Fluorine is a highly electronegative element that tends to gain electrons to form a negative ion, while argon is a noble gas that does not readily gain or lose electrons to form ions. Ionic bonds typically occur between metals and nonmetals, where there is a significant difference in electronegativity.
Fluorine and argon have different properties. Fluorine is a highly reactive nonmetal, while argon is a noble gas known for its inertness. Fluorine readily forms compounds with other elements, whereas argon does not form chemical bonds with other elements under normal conditions.
Fluorine and hydrogen: to form argon fluorohydride.Hydrogen to form argonium or argon hydride.
When boron and argon are combined, they do not react because argon is a stable noble gas and does not readily form compounds with other elements. They would simply exist as a mixture of boron and argon.